Nine days of hindlimb suspension resulted in atrophy (55%) and loss of protein (53%) in rat soleus muscle due to a marked elevation in protein breakdown (66%, P < 0.005). To define which proteolytic system(s) contributed to this increase, soleus muscles from unweighted rats were incubated in the presence of proteolytic inhibitors. An increase in lysosomal and Ca 2+-activated proteolysis (254%, P < 0.05) occurred in the atrophying incubated muscles. In agreement with the measurements in vitro, cathepsin B, cathepsins B + L and m-calpain enzyme activities increased by 111%, 92% and 180% (P < 0.005) respectively in the atrophying muscles. Enhanced mRNA levels for these proteinases (P < 0.05 to P < 0.001) paralleled the increased enzyme activities, suggesting a transcriptional regulation of these enzymes. However, the lysosomal and Ca 2+-dependent proteolytic pathways accounted for a minor part of total proteolysis in both control (9%) and unweighted rats (18%). Furthermore the inhibition of these pathways failed to suppress increased protein breakdown in unweighted muscle. Thus a non-lysosomal Ca 2+-independent proteolytic process essentially accounted for the increased proteolysis and subsequent muscle wasting. Increased mRNA levels for ubiquitin, the 14 kDa ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2 (involved in the ubiquitylation of protein substrates) and the C2 and C9 subunits of the 20 S proteasome (i.e. the proteolytic core of the 26 S proteasome that degrades ubiquitin conjugates) were observed in the atrophying muscles (P < 0.02 to P < 0.001). Analysis of C9 mRNA in polyribosomes showed equal distribution into both translationally active and inactive mRNA pools, in either unweighted or control rats. These results suggest that increased ATP-ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis is most probably responsible for muscle wasting in the unweighted soleus muscle.
We studied the alterations in skeletal muscle protein breakdown in long lasting sepsis using a rat model that reproduces a sustained and reversible catabolic state, as observed in humans. Rats were injected intravenously with live Escherichia coli ; control rats were pair-fed to the intake of infected rats. Rats were studied in an acute septic phase (day 2 postinfection), in a chronic septic phase (day 6), and in a late septic phase (day 10). The importance of the lysosomal, Ca 2 ϩ -dependent, and ubiquitin-proteasome proteolytic processes was investigated using proteolytic inhibitors in incubated epitrochlearis muscles and by measuring mRNA levels for critical components of these pathways. Protein breakdown was elevated during the acute and chronic septic phases (when significant muscle wasting occurred) and returned to control values in the late septic phase (when wasting was stopped). A nonlysosomal and Ca 2 ϩ -independent process accounted for the enhanced proteolysis, and only mRNA levels for ubiquitin and subunits of the 20 S proteasome, the proteolytic core of the 26 S proteasome that degrades ubiquitin conjugates, paralleled the increased and decreased rates of proteolysis throughout. However, increased mRNA levels for the 14-kD ubiquitin conjugating enzyme E2, involved in substrate ubiquitylation, and for cathepsin B and m-calpain were observed in chronic sepsis. These data clearly support a major role for the ubiquitinproteasome dependent proteolytic process during sepsis but also suggest that the activation of lysosomal and Ca 2 ϩ -dependent proteolysis may be important in the chronic phase. (
Immobilization produces morphological, physiological, and biochemical alterations in skeletal muscle leading to muscle atrophy and long periods of recovery. Muscle atrophy during disuse results from an imbalance between protein synthesis and proteolysis but also between apoptosis and regeneration processes. This work aimed to characterize the mechanisms underlying muscle atrophy and recovery following immobilization by studying the regulation of the mitochondria-associated apoptotic and the ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent proteolytic pathways. Animals were subjected to hindlimb immobilization for 4-8 days (I4 to I8) and allowed to recover after cast removal for 10-40 days (R10 to R40). Soleus and gastrocnemius muscles atrophied from I4 to I8 to a greater extent than extensor digitorum longus and tibialis anterior muscles. Gastrocnemius muscle atrophy was first stabilized at R10 before being progressively reduced until R40. Polyubiquitinated proteins accumulated from I4, whereas the increased ubiquitination rates and chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome were detectable from I6 to I8. Apoptosome and caspase-3 or -9 activities increased at I6 and I8, respectively. The ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent pathway was normalized early when muscle stops to atrophy (R10). By contrast, the mitochondria-associated apoptotic pathway was first downregulated below basal levels when muscle started to recover at R15 and completely normalized at R20. Myf 5 protein levels decreased from I4 to I8 and were normalized at R10. Altogether, our results suggest a two-stage process in which the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is rapidly up- and downregulated when muscle atrophies and recovers, respectively, whereas apoptotic processes may be involved in the late stages of atrophy and recovery.
Muscle atrophy prevails in numerous diseases (cancer cachexia, renal failure, infections, etc.), mainly results from elevated proteolysis, and is accelerated by bed rest. This largely contributes to increased health costs. Devising new strategies to prevent muscle wasting is a major clinical challenge. The ubiquitin proteasome system (UPS) degrades myofibrillar proteins, but the precise mechanisms responsible for actin breakdown are surprisingly poorly characterized. We report that chimeric flag-actin was destabilized and polyubiquitinylated in stably transfected C2C12 myotubes treated with the catabolic agent dexamethasone (1 μM) and that only proteasome inhibitors blocked its breakdown. Actin polyubiquitinylation was also detected in wild-type C2C12 myotubes and human muscle biopsies from control participants and patients with cancer. The muscle-specific E3 ubiquitin ligase MuRF1 is up-regulated in catabolic conditions and polyubiquitinylates components of the thick filament. We also demonstrate that recombinant GST-MuRF1 physically interacted and polyubiquitinylated actin in vitro and that MuRF1 is a critical component for actin breakdown, since MuRF1 siRNA stabilized flag-actin. These data identify unambiguously the abundant contractile protein actin as a target of the UPS in skeletal muscle both in vitro and in vivo, further supporting the need for new strategies blocking specifically the activation of this pathway in muscle wasting conditions.
We studied glucocorticoid-induced muscle wasting and subsequent recovery in adult (7-mo-old) and old (22-mo-old) rats, since the increased incidence of various disease states may result in glucocorticoids hypersecretion in aging. Adult and old rats received dexamethasone in their drinking water and were then allowed to recover. Muscle wasting occurred more rapidly in old rats and the recovery of muscle mass was impaired, suggesting that glucocorticoids may be involved in the emergence of muscle atrophy with advancing age. According to measurements in incubated epitrochlearis muscles, dexamethasone-induced muscle wasting mainly resulted from increased protein breakdown in the adult, but from depressed protein synthesis in the aged animal. Increased expression of cathepsin D, m-calpain, and ubiquitin was observed in the muscles from both dexamethasonetreated adult and old rats. By contrast, the disappearance of the stimulatory effect of glucocorticoids on protein breakdown in aging occurred along with a loss of ability of steroids to enhance the expression of the 14-kD ubiquitin carrier protein E2, which is involved in protein substrates ubiquitinylation, and of subunits of the 20 S proteasome (the proteolytic core of the 26 S proteasome that degrades ubiquitin conjugates). Thus, if glucocorticoids play any role in the progressive muscle atrophy seen in aging, this is unlikely to result from an activation of the ubiquitin-proteasome proteolytic pathway. (J. Cln.
We tested the hypothesis that skeletal muscle ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent proteolysis is dysregulated in ageing in response to feeding. In Experiment 1 we measured rates of proteasome-dependent proteolysis in incubated muscles from 8-and 22-month-old rats, proteasome activities, and rates of ubiquitination, in the postprandial and postabsorptive states. Peptidase activities of the proteasome decreased in the postabsorptive state in 22-month-old rats compared with 8-month-old animals, while the rate of ubiquitination was not altered. Furthermore, the down-regulation of in vitro proteasome-dependent proteolysis that prevailed in the postprandial state in 8-month-old rats was defective in 22-month-old rats. Next, we tested the hypothesis that the ingestion of a 5% leucine-supplemented diet may correct this defect. Leucine supplementation restored the postprandial inhibition of in vitro proteasome-dependent proteolysis in 22-month-old animals, by down-regulating both rates of ubiquitination and proteasome activities. In Experiment 2, we verified that dietary leucine supplementation had long-lasting effects by comparing 8-and 22-month-old rats that were fed either a leucine-supplemented diet or an alanine-supplemented diet for 10 days. The inhibited in vitro proteolysis was maintained in the postprandial state in the 22-month-old rats fed the leucine-supplemented diet. Moreover, elevated mRNA levels for ubiquitin, 14-kDa ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2, and C2 and X subunits of the 20S proteasome that were characteristic of aged muscle were totally suppressed in 22-month-old animals chronically fed the leucine-supplemented diet, demonstrating an in vivo effect. Thus the defective postprandial down-regulation of in vitro proteasome-dependent proteolysis in 22-month-old rats was restored in animals chronically fed a leucine-supplemented diet.
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