Skip to content

Myofibrillar and collagen protein synthesis in human skeletal muscle in young men after maximal shortening and lengthening contractions

Daniel R Moore, Stuart M Phillips, John A Babraj, Kenneth Smith, Michael J Rennie
Key takeaways
  1. 01Lengthening contractions prompted a more rapid rise in muscle protein synthesis
  2. 02Collagen synthesis increased equally after both types of exercise
  3. 03Findings apply to young, healthy men performing maximal contractions
  4. 04This may contribute to greater muscle growth with eccentric-focused training

Lengthening muscle contractions, like slowly lowering a weight, may stimulate a faster muscle-building response than shortening contractions.

Abstract

We aimed to determine whether there were differences in the extent and time course of skeletal muscle myofibrillar protein synthesis (MPS) and muscle collagen protein synthesis (CPS) in human skeletal muscle in an 8.5-h period after bouts of maximal muscle shortening (SC; average peak torque = 225 +- 7 Nm, means +- SE) or lengthening contractions (LC; average peak torque = 299 +- 18 Nm) with equivalent work performed in each mode. Eight healthy young men (21.9 +- 0.6 yr, body mass index 24.9 +- 1.3 kg/m2) performed 6 sets of 10 maximal unilateral LC of the knee extensors on an isokinetic dynamometer. With the contralateral leg, they then performed 6 sets of maximal unilateral SC with work matched to the total work performed during LC (10.9 +- 0.7 vs.10.9 +- 0.8 kJ, P = 0.83). After exercise, the participants consumed small intermittent meals to provide 0.1 g/kg/h of protein and carbohydrate. Prior exercise elevated MPS above rest in both conditions, but there was a more rapid rise after LC (P < 0.01). The increases (P < 0.001) in CPS above rest were identical for both SC and LC and likely represent a remodeling of the myofibrillar basement membrane. Therefore, a more rapid rise in MPS after maximal LC could translate into greater protein accretion and muscle hypertrophy during chronic resistance training utilizing maximal LC.

Cite this study
APA
Daniel R Moore, Stuart M Phillips, John A Babraj, Kenneth Smith, & Michael J Rennie (2005). Myofibrillar and collagen protein synthesis in human skeletal muscle in young men after maximal shortening and lengthening contractions. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/myofibrillar-and-collagen-protein-synthesis-in-human-skeletal-muscle-in-young-men-after-maximal-shortening-and-lengthening-contractions/
MLA
Daniel R Moore, et al. "Myofibrillar and collagen protein synthesis in human skeletal muscle in young men after maximal shortening and lengthening contractions." 2005, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/myofibrillar-and-collagen-protein-synthesis-in-human-skeletal-muscle-in-young-men-after-maximal-shortening-and-lengthening-contractions/.
Chicago
Daniel R Moore et al. 2005. "Myofibrillar and collagen protein synthesis in human skeletal muscle in young men after maximal shortening and lengthening contractions.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/myofibrillar-and-collagen-protein-synthesis-in-human-skeletal-muscle-in-young-men-after-maximal-shortening-and-lengthening-contractions/