Literature DB >> 21921242

The lumbrical muscle: a novel in situ system to evaluate adult skeletal muscle proteolysis and anticatabolic drugs for therapeutic purposes.

Leandro Bueno Bergantin1, Leonardo Bruno Figueiredo, Rosely Oliveira Godinho.   

Abstract

The molecular regulation of skeletal muscle proteolysis and the pharmacological screening of anticatabolic drugs have been addressed by measuring tyrosine release from prepubertal rat skeletal muscles, which are thin enough to allow adequate in vitro diffusion of oxygen and substrates. However, the use of muscle at accelerated prepubertal growth has limited the analysis of adult muscle proteolysis or that associated with aging and neurodegenerative diseases. Here we established the adult rat lumbrical muscle (4/hindpaw; 8/rat) as a new in situ experimental model for dynamic measurement of skeletal muscle proteolysis. By incubating lumbrical muscles attached to their individual metatarsal bones in Tyrode solution, we showed that the muscle proteolysis rate of adult and aged rats (3-4 to 24 mo old) is 45-25% of that in prepubertal animals (1 mo old), which makes questionable the usual extrapolation of proteolysis from prepubertal to adult/senile muscles. While acute mechanical injury or 1- to 7-day denervation increased tyrosine release from adult lumbrical muscle by up to 60%, it was reduced by 20-28% after 2-h incubation with β-adrenoceptor agonists, forskolin or phosphodiesterase inhibitor IBMX. Using inhibitors of 26S-proteasome (MG132), lysosome (methylamine), or calpain (E64/leupeptin) systems, we showed that ubiquitin-proteasome is accountable for 40-50% of total lumbrical proteolysis of adult, middle-aged, and aged rats. In conclusion, the lumbrical model allows the analysis of muscle proteolysis rate from prepubertal to senile rats. By permitting eight simultaneous matched measurements per rat, the new model improves similar protocols performed in paired extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles from prepubertal rats, optimizing the pharmacological screening of drugs for anticatabolic purposes.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21921242     DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00586.2011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  2 in total

1.  Mouse forepaw lumbrical muscles are resistant to age-related declines in force production.

Authors:  Katelyn A Russell; Rainer Ng; John A Faulkner; Dennis R Claflin; Christopher L Mendias
Journal:  Exp Gerontol       Date:  2015-03-08       Impact factor: 4.032

2.  Differential gene expression in small and large rainbow trout derived from two seasonal spawning groups.

Authors:  Andrea L Kocmarek; Moira M Ferguson; Roy G Danzmann
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2014-01-22       Impact factor: 3.969

  2 in total

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