Every athlete knows that the absolute requirement for performance is
energy. The weightlifter, sprinter, swimmer and marathon runner relies
on adequate energy for high power output. Although cardiovascular and
respiratory requirements are important for endurance athletes, fuel
supply to the muscles is essential for optimal performance.
Fueling the Power
Two important requirements by muscles to perform are protein and
energy. The food we eat supplies protein to build the structural
components and the basic substrate for conversion to energy for muscle
cells. The major source of chemical energy for not just muscle cells
but nearly all cells in the body is adenosine triphosphate (ATP). When
ATP levels decrease in muscles, there is no energy to fire the
structural machinery, no matter how much protein is provided. This is
commonly experienced as fatigue. Thus, the most important consideration
for endurance athletes is to renew ATP supplies.
Although ATP is the energy that fuels muscle contraction, it does not
function as a store of chemical energy. In fact the ATP concentration
in muscle is only 5-7 micromoles per gram of muscle. This would be
depleted in less than a second during intense muscular activity unless
it is resynthesized at a rate equal to what is utilized. ATP also
functions as an energy transfer system in cells when fuels such as
glucose are oxidized. In other words, when muscle glycogen is broken
down during physical activity, a phosphate is added to adenosine
diphosphate (or ADP) to form ATP. This generated ATP is then used to
power muscle contraction as well as a number of processes in the cell.
This ATP-ADP cycle links energy-releasing systems in the cell with
muscle contraction; the latter is dependent upon the former. So when
muscle contraction activity increases, so must the rate of fuel
utilization.
Muscle ATP levels are kept fairly constant. To avoid large changes in
the ATP:ADP ratio, the rate of fuel oxidation must be controlled
rapidly in proportion to the rate of ATP utilization. For example, the
rate of ATP turnover in a sprinter’s muscles may increase about
1,000-fold but only a small change occurs in the ATP concentration and
ATP:ADP ratio regardless of the distance (40-100 meters). This
consistency is maintained by enzymatic reactions in what is called the
“creatine-phosphate shuttle”. Creatine in muscle cells provides the
basic substrate for phosphocreatine, which buffers rapid fluctuations
of ATP. However, other substances are required to not only propel
forward the reactions that synthesize ATP, but also to clean up the
by-products, such as ammonia.
The primary fuel source in muscle is stored carbohydrate in the form of
glycogen. Through a series of enzymatic processes, which is
collectively called ‘glycolysis’, glycogen is converted to glucose.
During glycolysis ATP is synthesized to power the contractile machinery
and lactic acid is formed as an end product. The rate of glycolysis in
resting muscle is 0.05 micromoles/minute and increases to a maximum of
50-60 micromoles per minute per gram of muscle during sprinting.
Phosphocreatine concentrations decrease (for example, from 10.3 to 2.3
millimoles after a 100-meter sprint) and blood lactate increases
proportional to the distance sprinted (from 1.6 to 8.3 millimoles after
a 100-meter sprint). The decrease in phosphocreatine and accumulation
of lactic acid become limitations in maintaining maximum power output
by interfering in the contraction process.
Although middle and long distance runners make use of the pathways
described above to fuel their performance, they also use other fuels to
power their muscles. Middle distance runners use more blood glucose
than sprinters because they have a greater volume of blood supplying
the muscles. This also helps to continuously clear the lactic acid from
the working muscles into the blood. The lactate is then oxidized in
other muscles or converted back to glucose in the liver.
In addition to the former fuel systems, long distance runners
also use fat stored in the body. The mixture of fuels used by the long
distance runner is regulated by a system known as the glucose-fatty
acid cycle. Fatty acid oxidation comprises about 50% of the maximum
oxygen uptake with the remainder of the energy provided by blood
glucose and muscle glycogen. This mechanism spares carbohydrate so that
the limited muscle glycogen will last longer
What causes fatigue?
Many factors can contribute to fatigue in varying degrees during
endurance running: decreases in blood glucose, dehydration, increased
body temperature, and depletion of muscle glycogen. When high intensity
exercise demands more energy than the individual’s maximal aerobic
power, anaerobic metabolism compensates by converting muscle glycogen
to glucose and providing ATP. As intensity and distance increase,
muscle high energy phosphates (ATP and phosphocreatine) decrease, and
lactate and hydrogen ions increase. Fatigue develops as a consequence.
To avoid fatigue, adequate tissue levels of ATP and phosphocreatine
must be maintained, and lactic acid and hydrogen ions must be
continually removed.
Creatine in muscle cells provides the basic substrate for
phosphocreatine, which buffers rapid fluctuations of ATP.
However, other substances are required to not only propel forward the
reactions that synthesize ATP, but also to clean up the by products.
During intense muscular activity lactic acid is produced, which
dissociates into lactate and hydrogen ions. Elevated levels of these
by-products can depress the force output of muscle.
During intense exercise, the breakdown of proteins produces ammonia in
muscle that can accumulate in the cells or is released into the
circulation where it travels to the liver. When ammonia accumulates
locally it becomes toxic, interfering with the activity of important
enzymes and increasing the permeability of the cell to damaging ions.
Human adults excrete approximately 20 grams of urea per day. If this
rate decreases, ammonia accumulates in the blood to toxic levels.
Normally, blood ammonia is very low (0.5 mg/l). Only two to three times
this level is required to produce toxic symptoms, including memory
loss, psychosis, tremors, and ability to concentrate.
To avoid accumulation in muscle and liver cells a series of reactions
known collectively as the ‘urea cycle’ converts ammonia into a waste
product. The metabolism of nitrogen and carbon dioxide produces urea
that is then transported to the kidneys for excretion in urine.
In the mitochondria, the ‘power house’ of cells, ammonia combines with
carbon dioxide and ornithine to form an amino acid called citrulline.
Citrulline is then transported out of the mitochondria into the
cytoplasm where it is then converted to yet another amino acid called
arginine. Thus citrulline is essential to detoxify and remove ammonia
from muscle and liver cells.
Arginine serves as a precursor for creatine, but is mostly known as the
precursor for nitric oxide (NO2), a key signaling molecule. The
mechanism of action by Viagra, the popular drug for treating impotence
in men, is increased NO2 levels mediating relaxation of smooth muscle
in blood vessels. Additionally, NO2 acts as an anti-oxidant alleviating
oxidative stress.
Supplementing the diet with arginine has had limited success in
increasing its levels and NO2 in tissues. Studies have shown that the
rate of synthesis of arginine in the body is unaffected by intake of
dietary arginine. One reason may be the short half-life (one hour) of
dietary arginine. Also, dietary arginine is used mostly in the liver,
where uptake of arginine is rapid after eating a meal containing about
30-50 grams of protein (about 1-2 grams of arginine). Instead, dietary
supplementation with arginine’s precursor, citrulline, has been shown
to be more efficient in increasing tissue arginine and NO2 levels.
Therefore, citrulline serves as a substrate for energy precursors.
What is citrulline malate and what
does it do?
Citrulline is a non-essential amino acid and plays a role in nitrogen
balance and metabolic processes. Although not a component of most
proteins in the body, citrulline is found in some specialized proteins
in the hair, skin and neural cells. It is primarily synthesized from
glutamine in the intestines but is also found naturally in trace
amounts in some foods.
Citrulline supplied by the diet is efficiently absorbed from the
stomach and enters the blood via the major vein draining the digestive
system that empties into the liver. Much of it bypasses uptake in the
liver and is then circulated for distribution to the kidneys, brain,
muscle and other tissues for conversion to arginine.
Supplemental citrulline malate is a salt form of the amino acid. The
malate, or malic acid, is found in fruits such as apples and enhances
the effects of citrulline. Malic acid takes part in aerobic cellular
respiration where oxygen and a carbon compound (acetyl Co-A) are used
to produce immediate energy and CO2 in the mitochondria of the cell.
This is called the Kreb’s cycle. Malate conditions the recycling of
lactate and pyruvate promoting efficient energy production and
protecting muscles from fatigue.
How does citrulline malate benefit the
athlete?
Citrulline malate improves aerobic performance and capacity by
influencing lactic acid metabolism and reducing fatigue. Studies in
Europe, where citrulline malate has been used for over 20 years,
demonstrate reduction in mental and physical fatigue and exhaustion in
geriatric and post-surgery patients. Laboratory studies with rats and
microbes support the results seen in humans. Administration of
citrulline malate to animals protected against acidosis and ammonia
poisoning. In a microbial model, malate accelerated the clearance of
ammonium and citrulline facilitated lactate metabolism. The results
suggest a synergistic action of the complex.
Supplementation of citrulline malate to humans has shown promising
results. French researchers reported in several human studies that
blood lactate concentrations were reduced and ammonia elimination was
increased after physical exertion. Rapid recovery from physical effort
correlated to the disappearance of lactate from blood after performance
at a high level of acidosis suggesting an essential role in acid-base
balance.
Effects on metabolism in the finger flexor muscles after 15 days of
citrulline malate supplementation were determined during exercise.
Subject reports of significant reduction in fatigue were supported by
an increase in the rate of oxidative ATP and energy production.
Two groups of basketball players were supplemented with citrulline
malate for over 13 days with two different dosages. The group with the
higher dosage had significant improvements in maximal workload during
an exercise test on a cycle ergometer. Although fewer improved on the
second maximal cycling test, the authors concluded that citrulline
malate may improve aerobic performance.
What dosages are recommended?
The effective dosages commonly seen in the literature is three to four
grams twice daily. Citrulline malate is reported as well tolerated and
rapidly acting. Clinical results have been detected by the third to
fifth day after start of administration.
Overall, studies suggest that citrulline malate supplementation can
boost athletic performance and enhance recovery by eliminating the
amino acid breakdown products of protein metabolism and augmenting the
detoxifying capacity of liver cells in removal of ammonium and lactate
from the blood.






