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Disuse atrophy delays and reduces amino acid induced activation of key translational signaling proteins in humans
Author(s) -
Glover Elisa Ingrid,
Phillips Stuart M,
Tang Jason E,
Oates Bryan R,
Tarnopolsky Mark A,
Smith Kenneth,
Selby Anna,
Rennie Michael J
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.22.1_supplement.1225.6
Subject(s) - phosphorylation , anabolism , medicine , endocrinology , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , muscle atrophy , chemistry , skeletal muscle , signal transduction , biochemistry
We aimed to determine the effect of muscle disuse on activation by mixed amino acid (AA) feeding of three anabolic signaling proteins: mTOR, eIF2Bε and p70s6k. 10 men and 2 women wore an immobilizing knee brace for 14d, reducing muscle by CSA (5±1%, P<0.001). Subjects then received infusions of mixed AA at either 44 mg kg −1 h −1 or 261 mg kg −1 h −1 . Quadriceps biopsies were taken from both legs when fasted and fed (1, 2, 4 h). After 1 h AA infusion phosphorylation of mTOR (Ser2448), eIF2Bε (Ser 539) and p70s6k (Thr389) in the non‐immobilized leg increased by 35–56% (P<0.05), with a return to baseline by 2 h (p70s6k) or 4 h (mTOR, eIF2Bε). In the immobilized leg mTOR phosphorylation did not significantly increase at all after AA infusion whereas phosphorylation of eIF2Bε increased by only 22% at 2 h (P<0.05); phosphorylation of p70s6k increased by only 32 % at 1 h (P<0.05), but remained elevated until 4 h. p70s6k phosphorylation was 22 % higher (P=0.05) in the immobilized leg in the fasted state. These findings, together with an observed depressed AA‐induced muscle protein synthetic response, suggest a dampened response of the underlying translational control mechanisms with disuse atrophy in humans. We propose that a reduction in the feeding‐induced stimulation of muscle protein synthesis is of major importance in causing muscle loss with disuse in humans. Support: NSERC, CIHR, UK BBSRC, and EC EXEGENESIS

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