Literature DB >> 19079937

Leucine: a key amino acid in ageing-associated sarcopenia?

Dominique Dardevet1, Isabelle Rieu, Pierre Fafournoux, Claire Sornet, Lydie Combaret, Alain Bruhat, Sylvie Mordier, Laurent Mosoni, Jean Grizard.   

Abstract

During ageing, a progressive loss of muscle mass has been well described in both man and rodents. This loss of proteins results from an imbalance between protein synthesis and degradation rates. Although some authors have shown a decrease of myofibrillar protein synthesis rates in human volunteers, this imbalance is not clearly apparent when basal rates of protein turnover are measured. A decrease in muscle protein synthesis stimulation was detected nevertheless in ageing rats during the postprandial period, suggesting that the 'meal signal' was altered during ageing. Many results now suggest that aged muscle is less sensitive to the stimulatory effect of amino acids at physiological concentrations but is still able to respond if the increase in aminoacidaemia is sufficiently large. Indeed amino acids play an important role in regulating muscle protein turnover both in vitro and in vivo. At the molecular level, amino acids modulate gene expression. Amino acid response elements have been characterised in the promoter of transcriptional factor CCAAT-enhancer binding protein homologous protein and asparagine synthetase genes. Among amino acids, leucine seems to play the major role in regulating the metabolic function. It inhibits proteolysis and stimulates muscle protein synthesis independently of insulin. Leucine has been shown to act as a real mediator by modulating specifically the activities of intracellular kinases linked to the translation of proteins such as phosphatidylinosinol 3' kinase and mammalian target of rapamycin-70 kDa ribosomal protein S6 (p70S6K) kinases. We recently demonstrated in vitro that protein synthesis of ageing rat muscles becomes resistant to the stimulatory effect of leucine in its physiological concentration range. However, when leucine concentration was increased greatly above its postprandial level, protein synthesis was stimulated normally. Moreover, we studied the effect of meal leucine supplementation on in vivo protein synthesis in adult and ageing rats. Leucine supplementation had no additional effect on muscle protein synthesis in adults but totally restored its stimulation in ageing rats. Whether chronic oral leucine supplementation would be beneficial for maintaining muscle protein mass in elderly men and women remains to be studied.

Entities:  

Year:  2003        PMID: 19079937     DOI: 10.1079/NRR200252

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nutr Res Rev        ISSN: 0954-4224            Impact factor:   7.800


  3 in total

1.  Reply to Mäkinen and Ala-Korpela: Small-scale but accurate metabolomics with high reproducibility for identifying age-related blood metabolites.

Authors:  Hiroshi Kondoh; Mitsuhiro Yanagida
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-06-14       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Leucine supplementation improves muscle protein synthesis in elderly men independently of hyperaminoacidaemia.

Authors:  Isabelle Rieu; Michèle Balage; Claire Sornet; Christophe Giraudet; Estelle Pujos; Jean Grizard; Laurent Mosoni; Dominique Dardevet
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2006-06-15       Impact factor: 5.182

3.  Association of circulating branched-chain amino acids with cardiometabolic traits differs between adults and the oldest-old.

Authors:  Liang Sun; Caiyou Hu; Ruiyue Yang; Yuan Lv; Huiping Yuan; Qinghua Liang; Benjin He; Guofang Pang; Menghua Jiang; Jun Dong; Ze Yang
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-10-04
  3 in total

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