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Old 03-05-2012   #1 (permalink)
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Default Partitioning Nutrients From Fat Into Muscle

By Chris Martinez

If only we could partition all of the nutrients we consume on a daily basis directly into our muscle cells as opposed to our fat cells. Ideally, this would make a perfect-healthy world. There wouldn’t be such an epidemic of obesity, diabetes, diseases, metabolic syndrome, etc. Instead, we would have a bunch of healthy, ripped, and fit bodies walking around, aka super humans. Unfortunately, the body just doesn’t work like that and once again you have to be in-control and work for something. This brings me to the discussion of how exercise helps partition nutrients into muscle cells, rather than fat cells. In this article I will be talking about how different ratios of carbohydrate to protein directs nutrients from fat to muscle tissue, roles of insulin and exercise, and carbohydrate thresholds.

Different ratios of carbohydrate to protein directs nutrients from fat to muscle tissue

{1} A study from the Journal of Nutrition and Metabolism tested different carb to protein ratios to see if the majority of the nutrients would be partitioned into muscle or fat cells. They took 2 groups and fed 1 group a high carb, low protein, and moderate fat diet (12% Protein, 60% Carbs, 28% fat), something similar to what the food guide pyramid recommends and they fed the other group a high protein, moderate carb, and moderate fat diet (35% Protein, 35% Carbs, 30% fat), something similar to the zone or Mediterranean diet. What they found was in the high carb diet the majority of the insulin activating signal was found mainly in fat tissue and in the high protein diet insulin activating signal was found mostly in skeletal muscle tissue.

Now let’s hit the rewind button real quick, so you don’t get confused, let’s start off on a very basic understanding of what insulin does. Insulin is like a double edged sword, when you consume carbs, you get a rise in glucose, that rise in glucose sends a signal to your liver and pancreas to release insulin which stimulates increased glucose transporter density in muscle cells. Insulin can either: A) deliver amino acids into the muscle cell (which in turn help facilitate muscle growth) and carbohydrates into the bloodstream to be used for energy or into the muscle cell and liver to be stored as glycogen or B) too much insulin at the wrong times will shut down the body's ability to utilize fats for fuel, which in the long run will contribute to an increase in body fat.

Now back to the above study, what you can see with the high protein group (zone diet), this eliminated the insulin effect and used glucose (carbs) for muscle, brain, and used very little towards fat tissue. What you can see with the higher carb diet (food guide pyramid), this overloaded the system & posted a high insulin response towards fat tissue and the body will automatically push glucose into fat and bypass muscle.
With the high carb, low protein meals, it skips activation in muscle and almost gets all the activity in fat tissue in regards to insulin signaling. As opposed to with a higher protein, moderate carb diet, you get most of the signaling activated in skeletal muscle. So, what we are really talking about is the insulin sensitivity (Insulin sensitivity refers to how much glucose your body can handle) between the two tissues directed by which kind of meal you choose to eat. If you choose to eat a high carb, low protein meal then you will activate insulin signaling in fat tissue but if you eat a high protein, moderate carb meal then you will activate it in muscle tissue (where you want it).

Roles of insulin and exercise

Exercise changes the partitioning of where the nutrients go in the body. What muscle does, is it directs glucose and directs insulin to act on muscle tissue. Exercise senses you to glucose because it increases the number of GLUT-4 receptors you have on your cell surface. Think of GLUT-4 as the big bouncer at night clubs, who controls who gets in and tells people to take a hike. So, GLUT-4 kind of changes the direction glucose is going to go (just like a bouncer would control who gets in and who doesn’t) because fat doesn’t have the same response, if you work out your muscle, fat doesn’t increase it, you don’t want a bunch of GLUT-4 receptors on the surface of your fat cells, that means glucose is going to be directed there, you want it on the surface of your muscle cells. So specifically working out, whether that be HIIT cardio or HIT (high intensity training) resistance training increases the number of GLUT-4 receptors, the muscle cell surface and increases your insulin sensitivity {2,3}.

We all have carbohydrate thresholds

Carb thresholds vary from person to person and their activity levels. Training hard or less, male or female, no two bodies are alike and everything will be personalized. There’s no black and white answer when it comes to carb thresholds, everybody has to be aware of their own, unless you have a trainer or coach taking care of all the guess work for you. If you’re active compared to sedentary (couch potato), you’ll be able to tolerate more glucose (carbs) and your insulin response will be beneficial, rather than counterproductive. Meaning you will get a signal for glucose to be directed into muscle rather than fat. Let’s take eating 3 meals a day as an example, for an obese or sedentary person. The most amounts of carbs you can consume at a meal without a spill over is roughly 30-50g (this will provide necessary glucose for brain and liver), this prevents an insulin spike. Once you’re above 50, you need insulin to drive it into tissues. But, please note these are very general numbers and do not apply to everyone because everyone’s threshold is different. For a bodybuilder, the goal is to max out building muscle and protein, so carb threshold will be lower and different as opposed to a sprinter or runner because they will be burning through carbs and runners will have higher carb thresholds. Basically, carb thresholds depend on so many factors and the only way to figure out your own is really through trial and error.


Wrapping all of this up

In a perfect world we would love to partition all of the nutrients we consume on a daily basis directly into our muscle cells as opposed to our fat cells. But, as you can see throughout this article, the human body is much smarter than us and much more complicated than we think. But, luckily research shows we have control of where the majority of our glucose can be stored and that is in muscle cells by just simply having a high protein diet, figuring out your carb threshold, and adding more exercise to your daily routines. At the end of the day when it comes to carbs you have to pay attention to how your body responds to this nutrient. There’s no lower limit for carbs because it is not an essential nutrient for humans like protein and fat. People could survive without eating carbs. So, it all depends on activity levels, goals, frequency, intensity, duration, sets, reps, etc. This is the only way to figure out where this carb threshold is for you. Bottom line is to take care of protein and fats first, and then use carbs as an energy filler and on top of all that, add in more exercise (specifically weight training) so that you can live a longer, healthier, and sexier life. Now that you have all of this info, don’t just sit there… DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT! Peace





References:
(1) S Devkota, D K Layman. Increased ratio of dietary carbohydrate to protein shifts the focus of metabolic signaling from skeletal muscle to adipose. J Nutri and Metab. 2011.
(2) Layne E. Norton
(3) Kraniou GN, D Cameron-Smith, M Hargreaves. Effect of short term training on GLUT-4 mRNA and protein expression in human skeletal muscle. Exp Physiol. 2004; 89 (5):559-63


Chris Martinez is a huge fitness and nutrition enthusiast. He owns a training and nutrition consulting business, Dynamic Duo Training with twin brother Eric. He's also a fitness and nutrition writer, fitness model, and a coach that loves helping people reach their goals.
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Old 03-06-2012   #2 (permalink)
freshman
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Default Re: Partitioning Nutrients From Fat Into Muscle

Great post. I would love to see some studies done on some of the GDA supplements to see how effective they are in partitioning nutrients from fat into muscle. I know some people swear by them while others say it is nothing more then a placebo effect. Myself, I have been using Slin Sane for a while and have had favorable results from.
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Old 03-06-2012   #3 (permalink)
freshman
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Default Re: Partitioning Nutrients From Fat Into Muscle

@dbone1026- Ya I haven't came across any studies for this, but I've heard the same that some work, some don't. Honestly I don't know too much about them. Thanks for reading!
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Old 03-09-2012   #4 (permalink)
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Thumbs up Re: Partitioning Nutrients From Fat Into Muscle

Thank you! I've been preaching about nutrient partitioning for awhile (for some reason, it seems no one talks about perhaps the most important variable to building muscle/burning fat). Anyways, great article, I have a video that goes into this as well if anyone is interested (PS in the video I do have an offer to my MagazineAbs SSI System, but just ignore that if you want and get the awesome info in the video: MagazineAbs SSI System | MagazineAbs)
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Old 03-09-2012   #5 (permalink)
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Default Re: Partitioning Nutrients From Fat Into Muscle

Chris,

I noted a few problems with your article, aside from the fact that you base your entire argument on rodent data, which I think we can both agree on relates little to human metabolism, especially in terms of body composition. That being said, here's where you went wrong.

To quote you directly, "Insulin can either: A) deliver amino acids into the muscle cell (which in turn help facilitate muscle growth) and carbohydrates into the bloodstream to be used for energy or into the muscle cell and liver to be stored as glycogen or B) too much insulin at the wrong times will shut down the body's ability to utilize fats for fuel, which in the long run will contribute to an increase in body fat."

First off, insulin would NEVER deliver glucose into the bloodstream. Insulin is meant to CLEAR the bloodstream of glucose. Glucagon is the hormone which signals the liver to release glucose into the bloodstream.

Secondly, insulin at any level will inhibit lipolysis. Adipose tissue (specifically hormone sensitive lipase) is extremely insulin sensitive. Saying that, "too much insulin at the wrong time" misleads the reader in thinking that there are certain times wherein insulin can be released and fat can still be oxidized. This is never the case.

Furthermore, saying that "in the long run this will lead to fat gain" is also misleading. Calories in > calories out is THE ONLY thing that will lead to fat gain. Sure, insulin will inhibit lipolysis at the moment (fed state), but fat loss/gain is not an acute process. Fat loss/gain happens over the course of the day/week/month wherein periods of caloric deficit, REGARDLESS of insulin spikes, dictate how much fat is used.

To quote you again, "Let’s take eating 3 meals a day as an example, for an obese or sedentary person. The most amounts of carbs you can consume at a meal without a spill over is roughly 30-50g (this will provide necessary glucose for brain and liver), this prevents an insulin spike."

This is simply not true and has no foundation. In fact, a number of studies show that storing triglyceride made from carbohydrate is NOT the major pathway for carbohydrates in the human body [1, 2], even under conditions of excess calories from carbohydrate given in conjunction with a mixed diet [3-5]. It should be recognized that these studies used indirect calorimetry (a measure of heat production via CO2) which does not measure de novo lipogenesis (DNL) directly, but rather Net DNL (synthesis – oxidation). Either way, Net DNL exceeded lipolysis only after 5 days of overeating (175% daily kcal needs). This is probably not very realistic (or comfortable) for most people to do, unless you’re consciously eating almost twice as much as you need.

Furthermore, short-term studies looking at a single meal excessively high in carbohydrate (500g or about 2,000kcals from carbs alone!) were not shown to significantly contribute to fat gain after 24 hours [6, 7]. In fact, glycogen storage was seen as the primary fate of the excess carbohydrate, with stores increasing up to 1kg (or 2.2lbs for the metrically challenged!).

I hope this is helpful.

References:

1. Hellerstein, MK., Schwarz, JM., Neese, RA. Regulation of hepatic de novo lipogenesis in humans. Annu Rev Nutr 1996;16:523-557.

2. Hellerstein, MK. De novo lipogenesis in humans: metabolic and regulatory aspects. Eur J Clin Nutr 1999;53(1):S53-65.

3. Minehira, K., Vega, N., Vidal H., Acheson, K., Tappy L. Effect of carbohydrate overfeeding on whole body macronutrient metabolism and expression of lipogenic enzymes in adipose tissue of lean and overweight humans. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 2004;28(10):1291-8.

4. Hellerstein, MK. Synthesis of fat in response to alterations in diet: insights from new stable isotope methodologies. Lipids 1996;31:S117-25.

5. Schwarz, JM, Neese, RA., Hellerstein, MK., et al. Short-term alterations in carbohydrate energy intake in humans: striking effects on hepatic glucose production, de novo lipogenesis, lipolysis and whole-body fuel selection. J Clin Invest 1995;96:2735–43.

6. Acheson, KJ., Schutz, Y., Bessard, T., et al. Nutritional influences on lipogenesis and thermogenesis after a carbohydrate meal. Am J Physiol 1982;246:E62–70.

7. Acheson, KJ., Flatt, JP., Jequier E. Glycogen synthesis versus lipogenesis after a 500-g carbohydrate meal. Metabolism 1982;31:1234–40.

Last edited by decline104; 03-10-2012 at 07:06 PM.
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Old 03-09-2012   #6 (permalink)
freshman
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Default Re: Partitioning Nutrients From Fat Into Muscle

@Decline- Wow is all I can say. Glad you have so much time on your hands to research like that & comment on my article like that!
Here's my email if you want to talk to me personally. martichr24@yahoo.com
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