Literature DB >> 11869177

Skeletal muscle mRNA levels for cathepsin B, but not components of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway, are increased in patients with lung cancer referred for thoracotomy.

R Thomas Jagoe1, Christopher P F Redfern, Russell G Roberts, G John Gibson, Timothy H J Goodship.   

Abstract

Muscle wasting is a common and prominent feature of advanced cancer, including lung cancer. Evidence from animal experiments suggests that accelerated proteolysis via the ubiquitin--proteasome pathway is the primary cause of cancer-related cachexia. However, there are few data on the role of this pathway in determining muscle wasting in human cancer. The present study was designed to measure whether skeletal muscle gene expression of components of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and/or the lysosomal proteolytic pathway was increased in patients with early lung cancer. A total of 36 patients with lung cancer referred for curative resection and 10 control subjects had biopsies of latissimus dorsi muscle taken at operation. mRNA levels of four components of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway, i.e. polyubiquitin, C2 alpha proteasome subunit, 14 kDa ubiquitin-carrier protein and ubiquitin-activating protein, and of two lysosomal proteolytic enzymes, i.e. cathepsin B and cathepsin D, were measured using quantitative Northern blotting. mRNA levels for cathepsin B, but not for components of the ubiquitin--proteasome pathway, were higher in patients with cancer compared with controls (P=0.01). Among lung cancer patients, cathepsin B mRNA levels correlated with fat-free mass index (r = -0.57, P=0.003) and tumour stage (r(s)=0.45, P=0.03), and were higher in smokers (P=0.04). Thus gene expression of the lysosomal protease cathepsin B is increased in the skeletal muscle of patients with early lung cancer, and the strong inverse relationship with fat-free mass suggests that cathepsin B may have a role in inducing muscle wasting in the early stages of lung cancer.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11869177

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Sci (Lond)        ISSN: 0143-5221            Impact factor:   6.124


  25 in total

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6.  Using transcriptomics to identify and validate novel biomarkers of human skeletal muscle cancer cachexia.

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7.  The temporal responses of protein synthesis, gene expression and cell signalling in human quadriceps muscle and patellar tendon to disuse.

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9.  Cancer cachexia prevention via physical exercise: molecular mechanisms.

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10.  Cancer cachexia: impact, mechanisms and emerging treatments.

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