| Literature DB >> 28445792 |
Audrey Chanet1, Jérôme Salles1, Christelle Guillet1, Christophe Giraudet1, Alexandre Berry1, Véronique Patrac1, Carla Domingues-Faria1, Camille Tagliaferri1, Katia Bouton1, Justine Bertrand-Michel2, Miriam Van Dijk3, Marion Jourdan3, Yvette Luiking3, Sjors Verlaan3, Corinne Pouyet4, Philippe Denis1, Yves Boirie5, Stéphane Walrand6.
Abstract
We investigated the impact of vitamin D deficiency and repletion on muscle anabolism in old rats. Animals were fed a control (1 IU vitamin D3/g, ctrl, n=20) or a vitamin D-depleted diet (VDD; 0 IU, n=30) for 6 months. A subset was thereafter sacrificed in the control (ctrl6) and depleted groups (VDD6). Remaining control animals were kept for 3 additional months on the same diet (ctrl9), while a part of VDD rats continued on a depleted diet (VDD9) and another part was supplemented with vitamin D (5 IU, VDS9). The ctr16 and VDD6 rats and the ctr19, VDD9 and VDS9 rats were 21 and 24 months old, respectively. Vitamin D status, body weight and composition, muscle strength, weight and lipid content were evaluated. Muscle protein synthesis rate (fractional synthesis rate; FSR) and the activation of controlling pathways were measured. VDD reduced plasma 25(OH)-vitamin D, reaching deficiency (<25 nM), while 25(OH)-vitamin D increased to 118 nM in the VDS group (P<.0001). VDD animals gained weight (P<.05) with no corresponding changes in lean mass or muscle strength. Weight gain was associated with an increase in fat mass (+63%, P<.05), intramyocellular lipids (+75%, P<.05) and a trend toward a decreased plantaris weight (-19%, P=.12). Muscle FSR decreased by 40% in the VDD group (P<.001), but was restored by vitamin D supplementation (+70%, P<.0001). Such changes were linked to an over-phosphorylation of eIF2α. In conclusion, vitamin D deficiency in old rats increases adiposity and leads to reduced muscle protein synthesis through activation of eIF2α. These disorders are restored by vitamin D supplementation.Entities:
Keywords: Adiposity; Aging; Muscle protein anabolism; Sarcopenia; Vitamin D; eIF2α signaling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28445792 DOI: 10.1016/j.jnutbio.2017.02.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Biochem ISSN: 0955-2863 Impact factor: 6.048