β-alanine supplementation improves in-vivo fresh and fatigued muscle relaxation speed
Authors
Jones, Rebecca LouiseBarnett, Cleveland Thomas
Davidson, Joel
Maritza, Billy
Fraser, William D.
Harris, Roger C.
Sale, Craig
Affiliation
Nottingham Trent UniversityUniversity of East Anglia
Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital
Junipa Ltd
Issue Date
2017-03-27Subjects
musclecarnosine
contractile properties
electrical stimulation
muscle fatigue
beta-alanine
C600 Sports Science
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β-alanine supplementation improves skeletal muscle relaxationAbstract
PURPOSE: In fresh muscle, supplementation with the rate-limiting precursor of carnosine, β-alanine (BA), results in a decline in muscle half-relaxation time (HRT) potentially via alterations to calcium (Ca2+) handling. Accumulation of hydrogen cation (H+) has been shown to impact Ca2+ signalling during muscular contraction, carnosine has the potential to serve as a cytoplasmic regulator of Ca2+ and H+ coupling, since it binds to both ions. The present study examined the effect of BA supplementation on intrinsic in-vivo isometric knee extensor force production and muscle contractility in both fresh and fatigued human skeletal muscle assessed during voluntary and electrically evoked (nerve and superficial muscle stimulation) contractions. METHODS: Twenty-three males completed two experimental sessions, pre- and post- 28 day supplementation with 6.4 g.day-1 of BA (n = 12) or placebo (PLA; n = 11). Isometric force was recorded during a series of voluntary and electrically evoked knee extensor contractions. RESULTS: BA supplementation had no effect on voluntary or electrically evoked isometric force production, or twitch electromechanical delay and time-to-peak tension. There was a significant decline in muscle HRT in fresh and fatigued muscle conditions during both resting (3 ± 13%; 19 ± 26%) and potentiated (1 ± 15%; 2 ± 20%) twitch contractions. CONCLUSIONS: The mechanism for reduced HRT in fresh and fatigued skeletal muscle following BA supplementation is unclear. Due to the importance of muscle relaxation on total energy consumption, especially during short, repeated contractions, BA supplementation may prove to be beneficial in minimising contractile slowing induced by fatigue. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The trial is registered with Clinicaltrials.gov, ID number NCT02819505.Citation
Jones R.L., Barnett C.T., Davidson J., Maritza B., Fraser W.D., Harris R.C., Sale C. (2017) 'β-alanine supplementation improves in-vivo fresh and fatigued muscle relaxation speed', European Journal of Applied Physiology, 117 (5), pp.867-879.Publisher
Springer International Publishing AGPubMed ID
28349262PubMed Central ID
PMC5388709Additional Links
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00421-017-3569-1Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1439-6319EISSN
1439-6327ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1007/s00421-017-3569-1
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