| Literature DB >> 19653222 |
Piero Sestili1, Elena Barbieri, Chiara Martinelli, Michela Battistelli, Michele Guescini, Luciana Vallorani, Lucia Casadei, Alessandra D'Emilio, Elisabetta Falcieri, Giovanni Piccoli, Deborah Agostini, Giosuè Annibalini, Marco Paolillo, Anna Maria Gioacchini, Vilberto Stocchi.
Abstract
Creatine (Cr), one of the most popular nutritional supplements among athletes, has been recently shown to prevent the cytotoxicity caused by different oxidative stressors in various mammalian cell lines, including C2C12 myoblasts, via a direct antioxidant activity. Here, the effect of Cr on the differentiating capacity of C2C12 cells exposed to H(2)O(2) has been investigated. Differentiation into myotubes was monitored using morphological, ultrastructural, and molecular techniques. Treatment with H(2)O(2) (1 h) not only caused a significant (30%) loss of cell viability, but also abrogated the myogenic ability of surviving C2C12. Cr-supplementation (24 h prior to H(2)O(2) treatment) was found to prevent these effects. Interestingly, H(2)O(2)-challenged cells preconditioned with the established antioxidants trolox or N-acetyl-cysteine, although cytoprotected, did not display the same differentiating ability characterizing oxidatively-injured, Cr-supplemented cells. Besides acting as an antioxidant, Cr increased the level of muscle regulatory factors and IGF1 (an effect partly refractory to oxidative stress), the cellular availability of phosphocreatine and seemed to exert some mitochondrially-targeted protective activity. It is concluded that Cr preserves the myogenic ability of oxidatively injured C2C12 via a pleiotropic mechanism involving not only its antioxidant capacity, but also the contribution to cell energy charge and effects at the transcriptional level which common bona fide antioxidants lack.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19653222 DOI: 10.1002/mnfr.200800504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Nutr Food Res ISSN: 1613-4125 Impact factor: 5.914