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  4. A transient antioxidant stress response accompanies the onset of disuse atrophy in human skeletal muscle
 
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A transient antioxidant stress response accompanies the onset of disuse atrophy in human skeletal muscle

Author(s)
Dalla Libera, Luciano
Ravara, Barbara
Gobbo, Valerio
ASI Sponsor
Subjects

Adult

Animals

Antioxidants

Antioxidants: metabol...

Bed Rest

Biopsy

HSP70 Heat-Shock Prot...

HSP70 Heat-Shock Prot...

Heme Oxygenase-1

Heme Oxygenase-1: met...

Hindlimb Suspension

Humans

Male

Membrane Proteins

Membrane Proteins: me...

Muscular Atrophy

Muscular Atrophy: met...

Muscular Atrophy: pat...

Oxidative Stress

Protein Carbonylation...

Quadriceps Muscle

Quadriceps Muscle: me...

Quadriceps Muscle: pa...

Rats

Time Factors

Wistar

Young Adult

Date Issued
2009-08-01
Abstract
It is presently unknown whether oxidative stress increases in disused skeletal muscle in humans. Markers of oxidative stress were investigated in biopsies from the vastus lateralis muscle, collected from healthy subjects before [time 0 (T0)], after 1 wk (T8), and after 5 wk (T35) of bed rest. An 18% decrease in fiber cross-sectional area was detected in T35 biopsies (P<0.05). Carbonylation of muscle proteins significantly increased about twofold at T35 (P<0.02) and correlated positively with the decrease in fiber cross-sectional area (P=0.04). Conversely, T8 biopsies showed a significant increase in protein levels of heme oxygenase-1 and glucose-regulated protein-75 (Grp75)/mitochondrial heat shock protein-70, two stress proteins involved in the antioxidant defense (P<0.05). Heme oxygenase-1 increase, which involved a larger proportion of slow fibers compared with T0, appeared blunted in T35 biopsies. Grp75 protein level increased threefold in T8 biopsies and localized especially in slow fibers (P<0.025), to decrease significantly in T35 biopsies (P<0.05). Percent change in Grp75 levels positively correlated with fiber cross-sectional area (P=0.01). Parallel investigations on rat soleus muscles, performed after 1-15 days of hindlimb suspension, showed that Grp75 protein levels significantly increased after 24 h of unloading (P = 0.02), i.e., before statistically significant evidence of muscle atrophy, to decrease thereafter in relation to the degree of muscle atrophy (P=0.03). Therefore, in humans as in rodents, disuse muscle atrophy is characterized by increased protein carbonylation and by the blunting of the antioxidant stress response evoked by disuse.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/2918
ISSN
8750-7587
Journal
Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)
DOI
10.1152/japplphysiol.00280.2009
URL
https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/japplphysiol.00280.2009
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