Experimental Physiology
	

Celebrating 100 years
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Experimental Physiology 90.4 pp 427-436
DOI: 10.1113/expphysiol.2005.029983
© The Physiological Society 2005
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G. L. Brown Prize Lecture

Body maintenance and repair: how food and exercise keep the musculoskeletal system in good shape

Michael J Rennie1

1 University of Nottingham, School of Biomedical Sciences, Graduate Entry Medical School, Derby City General Hospital, Uttoxeter Road, Derby DE22 3DT, UK

Abstract

This article provides a personal view of how feeding and exercise acutely modify protein metabolism of human skeletal muscle, with discussion of the anabolic signalling mechanisms involved and some new findings on the metabolism of the turnover of collagen, tendon and bone.

(Received 19 January 2005; accepted after revision 30 March 2005; first published online 15 April 2005)
Corresponding author M. J. Rennie: University of Nottingham, School of Biomedical Sciences, Graduate Entry Medical School, Derby City General Hospital, Uttoxeter Road, Derby DE22 3DT, UK. Email: michael.rennie{at}nottingham.ac.uk


Footnotes

This is the 2004 G. L. Brown Prize Lecture, which was given by Professor M. J. Rennie at the Universities of Aberdeen, Bristol, Coventry, Glasgow, Loughborough and Oxford, and at The Queen's University of Belfast, King's College London and Tapton Beacon School, Sheffield.




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D. J. Paterson
Celebrating 100 years of publishing discovery in physiology 1908 - 2008
Exp Physiol, January 1, 2008; 93(1): 1 - 15.
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