首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The effect of corticosterone on myofibrillar protein breakdown in diabetic rats was investigated in order to assess the possible counteracting effects of the secondary rise in plasma insulin concentrations which normally accompanies such treatment. Nτ-Methylhistidine excretion, an index of myofibrillar protein breakdown, was compared before and after corticosterone treatment (4.0 mg/100 g body wt. per day) of normal control, adrenalectomized, 10-day-streptozotocin-diabetic and adrenalectomized diabetic rats. Diabetic rats received 1.5 units of insulin/100 g body wt. per day throughout the experiment and showed marked hyperglycaemia and glucosuria during corticosterone treatment, whereas non-diabetic rats had only mild hyperglycaemia but elevated insulin concentrations. Corticosterone treatment increased the average rate of myofibrillar protein breakdown by 68% and 95% respectively in non-diabetic and diabetic rats. Net loss of muscle non-collagen protein for the same 7-day period was greater in diabetic than in non-diabetic animals (4.15 versus 2.84% per day), and the calculated average synthesis rates were lowest in diabetic rats. Adrenalectomy had little effect except to decrease slightly the rate of muscle protein breakdown. These results show that the rise in plasma insulin concentrations that accompanies exogenous corticosterone administration to non-diabetic rats diminishes the catabolic effect of this glucocorticoid on muscle. Insulin appears to antagonize the effects of the glucocorticoid by attenuating the increased rates of myofibrillar protein breakdown and, to a lesser extent, by limiting the decrease in synthesis rates.  相似文献   

2.
Using 3-methylhistidine (3-MeHis) excretion as an index, we evaluated the abilities of molting and non-molting sparrows to adjust muscle protein degradation rates in response to three types of nutritional limitations: total food shortage, protein deficiency, or sulfur amino acid (SAA) deficiency. Regardless of nutritional status, molting birds excreted daily at least two-fold as much 3-MeHis as their non-molting counterparts. Both molting and non-molting birds significantly reduced daily excretion of 3-MeHis in response to a 1-day fast. Likewise, both molting and non-molting birds promptly reduced daily excretion of 3-MeHis in response to protein deficiency (within 1 day) and significantly so by day 5 and through day 9 of dietary treatment. Reductions in excretion of 3-MeHis by fasted or protein-limited birds could not be explained solely on the basis of reduced body protein mass and provided evidence of adjustments in muscle protein degradation rates. Responses of birds to SAA deficiency differed between molting and non-molting birds and from responses to the other nutritional limitations. In these birds, 3-MeHis excretion increased significantly on day 1 of dietary treatment. By day 5 and through day 9 of SAA deficiency, non-molting birds excreted 3-MeHis at rates similar to those of their well-nourished counterparts. In contrast, excretion of 3-MeHis by molting birds experiencing SAA deficiency remained significantly higher than by their well-nourished counterparts. Neither molting nor non-molting birds readily reduced muscle protein degradation rates in response to SAA deficiency and it is suggested that their failure to do so may provide evidence of a direct and (or) indirect role for glutathione in the regulation of muscle protein degradation.  相似文献   

3.
The fractional rates of synthesis and breakdown of myosin and actin in skeletal muscle of younn adult male rats were measured during 2 weeks of ad libitum feeding of a protein-free diet, and 8 days of refeeding with an adequate protein diet. Daily urinary excretion of Nτ-Methylhistidine (3-methylhistidine) by the Nτ-methylhistidine pool of the body gave the fractional breakdown rate of the myosin-actin pool. The fractional synthesis rate of the myosin-actin pool was calculated from the fractional breakdown rate and the size of Nτ-methylhistidine pool in the body. The feeding of the protein-free diet resulted in a decreased in body weight and a decrease in daily urinary excretion of Nτ-methylhistidine. Refeeding caused an increase in body weight and a progressive increase in daily urinary excretion of Nτ-methylhistidine. At the start of the experiment, the fractional breakdown rate of the myosin-actin pool was 4% per day and with prolonged protein depletion, the rate decreased to 1.25% per day. The fractional synthesis rate also decreased more rapidly than the breakdown rate. On refeeding for one day with an adequate protein diet, the fractional synthesis rate increased from 0.75 to 5.75% per day. Accumulation of skeletal muscle protein by refeeding was accompanied by a difference between the faster rate of synthesis and slower rate of breakdown even though the fractional breakdown rate increased during the rehabilitation period.  相似文献   

4.
The present study characterized total and myofibrillar protein breakdown rates in a muscle preparation frequently used in vitro, i.e. incubated extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus (SOL) muscles of young rats. Total and myofibrillar protein breakdown rates were assessed by determining net production by the incubated muscles of tyrosine and 3-methylhistidine (3-MH) respectively. Both amino acids were determined by h.p.l.c. Both total and myofibrillar protein breakdown rates were higher in SOL than in EDL muscles and were decreased by incubating the muscles maintained at resting length, rather than flaccid. After fasting for 72 h, total protein breakdown (i.e. tyrosine release) was increased by 73% and 138% in EDL muscles incubated flaccid and at resting length respectively. Net production of tyrosine by SOL muscle was not significantly altered by fasting. In contrast, myofibrillar protein degradation (i.e. 3-MH release) was markedly increased by fasting in both muscles. When tissue was incubated in the presence of 1 munit of insulin/ml, total protein breakdown rate was inhibited by 17-20%, and the response to the hormone was similar in muscles incubated flaccid or at resting length. In contrast, myofibrillar protein breakdown rate was not altered by insulin in any of the muscle preparations. The results support the concepts of individual regulation of myofibrillar and non-myofibrillar proteins and of different effects of various conditions on protein breakdown in different types of skeletal muscle. Thus determination of both tyrosine and 3-MH production in red and white muscle is important for a more complete understanding of protein regulation in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

5.
The role of prostaglandins in the regulation of muscle protein breakdown is controversial. We examined the influence of arachidonic acid (5 microM), prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) (2.8 microM) and the prostaglandin-synthesis inhibitor indomethacin (3 microM) on total and myofibrillar protein breakdown in rat extensor digitorum longus and soleus muscles incubated under different conditions in vitro. In other experiments, the effects of indomethacin, administered in vivo to septic rats (3 mg/kg, injected subcutaneously twice after induction of sepsis by caecal ligation and puncture) on plasma levels and muscle release of PGE2 and on total and myofibrillar protein breakdown rates were determined. Total and myofibrillar proteolysis was assessed by measuring production by incubated muscles of tyrosine and 3-methylhistidine respectively. Arachidonic acid or PGE2 added during incubation of muscles from normal rats did not affect total or myofibrillar protein degradation under a variety of different conditions in vitro. Indomethacin inhibited muscle PGE2 production by incubated muscles from septic rats, but did not lower proteolytic rates. Administration in vivo of indomethacin did not affect total or myofibrillar muscle protein breakdown, despite effective plasma levels of indomethacin with decreased plasma PGE2 levels and inhibition of muscle PGE2 release. The present results suggest that protein breakdown in skeletal muscle of normal or septic rats is not regulated by PGE2 or other prostaglandins.  相似文献   

6.
Skeletal-muscle growth and protein turnover.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Because of turnover, protein synthesis and breakdown can each be involved in the regulation of the growth of tissue protein. To investigate the regulation of skeletal-muscle-protein growth we measured rates of protein synthesis and breakdown in growing rats during development on a good diet, during development on a marginally low-protein diet and during rehabilitation on a good diet after a period of severe protein deficiency. Rates of protein synthesis were measured in vivo with a constant intravenous infusion of [14C]tyrosine. The growth rate of muscle protein was measured and the rate of breakdown calculated as breakdown rate=synthesis rate-growth rate. These measurements showed that during development on a good diet there was a fall with age in the rate of protein synthesis resulting from a fall in capacity (RNA concentration) and activity (synthesis rate per unit of RNA). There was a fall with age in the breakdown rate so that the rate was highest in the weaning rats, with a half-life of 3 days. There was a direct correlation between the fractional growth and breakdown rates. During rehabilitation on the good diet, rapid growth was also accompanied by high rates of protein breakdown. During growth on the inadequate diet protein synthesis rates were lesss than in controls, but growth occurred because of decreased rates of protein breakdown. This compression was not complete, however, since ultimate muscle size was only one-half that of controls. It is suggested that increased rates of protein breakdown are a necessary accompaniment to muscle growth and may result from the way in which myofibrils proliferate.  相似文献   

7.
The effects of intake of Vicia faba L. and casein as the sources of protein on protein synthesis and breakdown were investigated. The results showed that the protein deposition as a percentage of body weight as well as the muscle and myofibrillar nitrogen content are not altered by the experimental diets. The values of myofibrillar gain (mg N2/day) were higher in the animals fed on casein diets than those fed on legume protein at both levels (12 and 18%) while no differences were found in the myofibrillar protein breakdown assessed by the urinary excretion of 3-methylhistidine. Therefore, it is suggested that the stunting of growth is not due to an increased protein degradation, but an impaired protein synthesis.  相似文献   

8.
An automatic, more rapid and simplified analytical system for determination of 3-methylhistidine in urine and skeletal muscle is described, which may be applied to more extensive studies of large number of samples within a reasonable period of time and constitutes a powerful tool in understanding the dynamics of protein metabolism in the intact organism. This procedure allows the analysis of 3-Methylhistidine by ion-exchange chromatography in 140 +/- 2.5 min using a single column system. The mean urinary 3-Methylhistidine output of rats weighing about 200 g fed on an adequate diet of casein was 0.84 +/- 0.02 microM/100 g BW, and the mean values for skeletal muscle in these animals were 0.74 +/- 0.03 microM/g tissue. The fractional rate of myofibrillar protein breakdown assessed by the urinary 3-Methylhistidine was 0.028 +/- 0.002%.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of T3 (3,3',5-tri-iodothyronine) on protein turnover in skeletal and cardiac muscle was measured in intact rats by means of a 6 h [14C]tyrosine-infusion technique. Treatment with 25-30 micrograms of T3/100 g body wt. daily for 4-7 days increased the fractional rate of protein synthesis in skeletal muscle. Since the fractional growth rate of the muscle was decreased or unchanged, T3 treatment increased the rate of muscle protein breakdown. These findings suggest that increased protein degradation is an important factor in decreasing skeletal-muscle mass in hyperthyroidism. In contrast with skeletal muscle, T3 treatment for 7 days caused an equivalent increase in the rate of cardiac muscle growth and protein synthesis. This suggests that hyperthyroidism does not increase protein breakdown in heart muscle as it does in skeletal muscle. The failure of T3 to increase proteolysis in heart muscle may be due to a different action on the cardiac myocyte or to systemic effects of T3 which increase cardiac work.  相似文献   

10.
3-Methylhistidine excretion in vivo and in vitro was monitored in hypervitaminotic and pair-fed control rats. Feeding with excess of retinyl palmitate (40 000 i.u./day per 100 g body wt.) significantly increased urinary 3-methylhistidine and creatinine output during a 4-day treatment interval. 3-Methylhistidine release from perfused rat hindquarters was also elevated after 5 days of vitamin treatment. To determine whether the adrenals were involved in mediating the above response, a study was conducted on adrenalectomized and sham-operated rats. Excessive vitamin A intake stimulated 3-methylhistidine excretion in vivo and in vitro in both adrenalectomized and sham-operated animals, thus suggesting that the vitamin A-induced acceleration in myofibrillar protein breakdown was not mediated by the adrenals. In both groups of rats, vitamin A treatment had no effect on the rate of protein synthesis, on the basis of incorporation in vitro of [3H]phenylalanine into muscle protein. Additional studies revealed that the addition of excess retinol to the perfusion medium (10 i.u./ml) had no significant effect on the rates of 3-methylhistidine release or [3H]phenylalanine incorporation in vitro. Finally, high doses of cortisol (7 mg/day per 100g body wt.) administered to intact rats for 5 days significantly increased rates of 3-methylhistidine excretion, both in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
Quantitative changes in fractional catabolic and synthetic rates of the myosin-actin pool in rat muscle under starvation and refeeding, during growth or after treatment with hydrocortisone were studied by estimating urinary excretion of Nτ-methylhistidine (3-methyl- histidine; Me-His).

Following deprivation of food, urinary Me-His output increased from 0.35 mg/day to 0.45 mg/day during first 2 day in spite of decreasing body Me-His pool. This high rate of Me-His excretion was maintained for the following 4 days of starvation and then decreased. When rats were refed a 20% casein diet after 10 days of starvation, Me-His excretion continued to decrease even after 3 days of refeeding. On the fifth day of refeeding, it began to rise progressively. During starvation, fractional catabolic rate of myosin-actin was about 3.7 %/day in comparison with 2.6 %/day of fed rats. After refeeding, the fractional catabolic rate decreased rapidly to a minimum value of 1.7 %/day on the third day. After that, it reached to a value of 2.6 %/day of fed rats. On the other hand, fractional synthetic rate of myosin-actin dropped immediately after fasting and the low rate of about 0.4 %/day was maintained during starvation period. Fractional synthetic rate recovered quickly after refeeding.

Urinary output of nitrogen and creatinine rose quickly on the first day after administration of hydrocortisone and on the second day it fell to their normal value. While Me-His excretion increased after injection of hydrocortisone up to 0.52 mg/day on the second day and this high excretion rate remained until the following day. From these results, it was shown that administration of hydrocortisone to rats enhances catabolism and reduces synthesis of myosin-actin. The results also show that the effect of this hormone on myofibrillar protein catabolism appears to last longer than its effect on nitrogen metabolism in the whole body judged from urinary nitrogen output.

Fractional rates of catabolism and synthesis of rat myosin-actin were 3.3 %/day (half- life of 21 days) and 7.2%/day, respectively, at the growth stage of 129 g body weight. These rates were 2.3 %/day (half-life of 30 days) and 2.8 %/day, respectively, at the mature stage of 363 g body weight.

Under the dietary conditions in this experiment, fractional synthetic rate changed far more dramatically than catabolic rate. This suggests that mass of muscle protein is primarily regulated by the rate of synthesis, although the rate of catabolism should not be neglected.  相似文献   

12.
Myofibrillar protein degradation was measured in 4-week-old normal (line 412) and genetically muscular-dystrophic (line 413) New Hampshire chickens by monitoring the rates of 3-methylhistidine excretion in vivo and in vitro. A method of perfusing breast and wing muscles was developed and the rate of 3-methylhistidine release in vitro was measured between 30 and 90min of perfusion. During this perfusion period, 3-methylhistidine release from the muscle preparation was linear, indicating that changes in 3-methylhistidine concentration of the perfusate were the result of myofibrillar protein degradation. Furthermore, the viability of the perfused muscle was maintained during this interval. After 60min of perfusion, ATP, ADP and creatine phosphate concentrations in pectoral muscle were similar to muscle freeze-clamped in vivo. Rates of glucose uptake and lactate production were constant during the perfusion. In dystrophic-muscle preparations, the rate of 3-methylhistidine release in vitro (nmol/h per g of dried muscle) was elevated 2-fold when compared with that in normal muscle. From these data the fractional degradation rates of myofibrillar protein in normal and dystrophic pectoral muscle were calculated to be 12 and 24% respectively. Daily 3-methylhistidine excretion (nmol/day per g body wt.) in vivo was elevated 1.35-fold in dystrophic chickens. Additional studies revealed that the anti-dystrophic drugs diphenylhydantoin and methylsergide, which improve righting ability of dystrophic chickens, did not alter 3-methylhistidine release in vitro. This result implies that changes in myofibrillar protein turnover are not the primary lesion in avian muscular dystrophy. From tissue amino acid analysis, the myofibrillar 3-methylhistidine content per g dry weight of muscle was similar in normal and dystrophic pectoral muscle. More than 96% of the 3-methylhistidine present in pectoral muscle was associated with the myofibrillar fraction. Dystrophic myofibrillar protein contained significantly less 3-methylhistidine (nmol/g of myofibrillar protein) than protein from normal muscle. This observation supports the hypothesis that there may be a block in the biochemical maturation and development of dystrophic muscle after hatching. Free 3-methylhistidine (nmol/g wet wt.) was elevated in dystrophic muscle, whereas blood 3-methylhistidine concentrations were similar in both lines. In summary, the increased myofibrillar protein catabolism demonstrated in dystrophic pectoral muscle correlates with the increased lysosomal cathepsin activity in this tissue as reported by others.  相似文献   

13.
The concerted effect of triiodothyronine (T3) and corticosterone on muscle protein synthesis and breakdown was studied. Thyroidectomized young male rats were treated with T3 (1.5 microgram/100 g body weight per day), corticosterone (10 mg/100 g body weight per day) and both T3 and corticosterone for 4 days. On the 3rd day of the experiment urine was collected to measure N tau-methylhistidine excretion as an index of muscle protein breakdown. On the last day of the experiment, the rates of protein synthesis in skeletal muscles were measured by the large-dose [3H]phenylalanine method. N tau-Methylhistidine excretion was slightly increased by T3 treatment and it was increased about 3-times by corticosterone treatment. When both T3 and corticosterone were administered, it was increased about 6-fold. The rate of muscle protein breakdown calculated from the difference between the rate of protein synthesis and the growth rate was consistent with these findings. The rate of muscle protein synthesis was increased by T3, and it was decreased by corticosterone. The rate was the same as that of the thyroidectomized control group when the animals were given T3 and corticosterone, showing that T3 restrained the inhibiting effect of corticosterone on muscle protein synthesis. The results indicate that a physiological level of T3 enhances the catabolic action of pharmacological doses of glucocorticoids on muscle protein breakdown.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of graded doses of insulin and corticosterone on myofibrillar protein turnover were investigated in growing diabetic rats in order to assess their counteractive roles in the control of protein accretion. N tau-Methylhistidine excretion and carcass protein accretion were measured over 6 days in streptozotocin-diabetic rats receiving either a constant catabolic dose of corticosterone accompanied by graded doses of insulin or a constant dose of insulin accompanied by graded doses of corticosterone. The high corticosterone dose decreased the rate of protein accretion by both increasing the rate of degradation and decreasing the rate of synthesis. Increasing insulin dosage counteracted these effects, but could not restore positive accretion rates. Direct measurement of protein-synthesis rates gave results comparable with those obtained from use of N tau-methylhistidine excretion. At constant insulin dosage, increased corticosterone to 45 mg/kg body wt. per day caused a dose-related linear decrease in protein accretion rates from +4.5 to -3.2% per day. Growth ceased at 28 mg of corticosterone/kg body wt. per day, largely owing to a fall in synthesis rates (-3.5%/day) rather than the increase in degradation rates (+1.0%/day). However, at steroid doses greater than 30 mg/kg body wt. per day the degradation rate increased markedly and accounted for most of the additional fall in accretion. These results show that insulin antagonizes the action of glucocorticoids on both the synthesis and degradative pathways of myofibrillar protein turnover. The changes in fractional degradation rates appear relatively more attenuated by insulin than are those of synthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Myofibrillar protein synthesis in myostatin-deficient mice   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Either increased protein synthesis or prolonged protein half-life is necessary to support the excessive muscle growth and maintenance of enlarged muscles in myostatin-deficient mice. This issue was addressed by determining in vivo rates of myofibrillar protein synthesis in mice with constitutive myostatin deficiency (Mstn(DeltaE3/DeltaE3)) or normal myostatin expression (Mstn(+/+)) by measuring tracer incorporation after a systemic flooding dose of l-[ring-(2)H(5)]phenylalanine. At 5-6 wk of age, Mstn(DeltaE3/DeltaE3) mice had increased muscle mass (40%), fractional rates of myofibrillar synthesis (14%), and protein synthesis per whole muscle (60%) relative to Mstn(+/+) mice. With maturation, fractional rates of synthesis declined >50% in parallel with decreased DNA and RNA [total, 28S rRNA, and poly(A) RNA] concentrations in muscle. At 6 mo of age, Mstn(DeltaE3/DeltaE3) mice had even greater increases in muscle mass (90%) and myofibrillar synthesis per muscle (85%) relative to Mstn(+/+) mice, but the fractional rate of synthesis was normal. Estimated myofibrillar protein half-life was not affected by myostatin deficiency. Muscle DNA concentrations were reduced in both young and mature Mstn(DeltaE3/DeltaE3) mice, whereas RNA concentrations were normal, so the ratio of RNA to DNA was approximately 30% greater than normal in Mstn(DeltaE3/DeltaE3) mice. Thus the increased protein synthesis and RNA content per muscle in myostatin-deficient mice cannot be explained entirely by an increased number of myonuclei.  相似文献   

16.
To examine the role of lysosomes in the degradation of skeletal-muscle myofibrillar proteins, we measured the release of N tau-methylhistidine from perfused muscle of starved and fed rats in the presence or absence of agents that inhibit lysosomal proteinase activity. After 1 day of starvation, the release of N tau-methylhistidine by perfused muscle of 4-, 8- and 24-week-old rats increased by 322, 159 and 134% respectively. On the other hand, total protein breakdown, assessed by tyrosine release, increased by 62, 20 and 20% respectively. Inhibitors of lysosomal proteinases as well as high concentrations of insulin or amino acids failed to diminish the release of N tau-methylhistidine by perfused muscle of starved and fed rats, despite a 25-35% inhibition of total protein breakdown. The data strongly suggest that the complete breakdown of myofibrillar proteins occurs via a non-lysosomal pathway. They also suggest that total proteolysis, which primarily reflects non-myofibrillar protein breakdown, occurs at least in part within lysosomes.  相似文献   

17.
The validation of the urinary excretion of N-methylhistidine (N-MH) by quail as an index of the muscle protein turnover rate was tested using the criterion of the rate of recovery of radioactivity in urine following an intraperitoneal dose of l-[3-14C]methylhistidine. A genetic study on muscle protein turnover in quail was conducted using three genetically diverse lines (LL, large body size; SS, small body size; RR, random-bred control line) selected for body size. When l-[3-14C]methylhistidine was administered to 20-week-old male and female coturnix quail by direct intraperitoneal injection, approximately 90% of the l-[3-14C]methylhistidine was recovered by 96 hr postinjection. Recoveries were low in the egg and muscle. These results show that N-MH released from myofibrillar protein is not reutilized and the excretion of N-MH is a satisfactory index of muscle protein breakdown. In all lines, the amount of urinary N-MH excretion and fractional synthesis (Ks) and degradation (Kd) rates at the high growing period were higher than those at the low growing period. The Ks and Kd are significantly different among selected lines at both 3 and 6 weeks of age. At 3 weeks of age, the fractional rate of synthesis of the LL line (13.2%/day) was higher than that of the RR line (11.5%/day), whereas the SS (8.1%/day) was lower than that of the RR line (11.5%/day). The fractional rates of degradation of both the LL line (4.1%/day) and the SS line (5.6%/day) were lower than that of the RR line (7.0%/day) at 3 weeks of age. From these results, it was recognized that selection for body size gave rise to the changes in the muscle protein turnover rate.  相似文献   

18.
Characteristic feature of critical illness, such as trauma and sepsis, is muscle wasting associated with activated oxidation of branched-chain amino acids (valine, leucine, isoleucine) and enhanced release of glutamine (GLN) to the blood. GLN consumption in visceral tissues frequently exceeds its release from muscle resulting in GLN deficiency that may exert adverse effects on the course of the disease. In the present study, we investigated the effects of GLN depletion in extracellular fluid on GLN production and protein and amino acid metabolism in skeletal muscle of healthy, laparotomized, and septic rats. Cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) was used as a model of sepsis. After 24 h, soleus muscle (SOL, slow-twitch, red muscle) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL, fast-twitch, white muscle) were isolated and incubated in a medium containing 0.5 mM GLN or without GLN. L-[1-14C]leucine was used to estimate protein synthesis and leucine oxidation, 3-methylhistidine release was used to evaluate myofibrillar protein breakdown. CLP increased GLN release from muscle, protein breakdown and leucine oxidation, and decreased protein synthesis. The effects were more pronounced in EDL. Alterations induced by laparotomy were similar to those observed in sepsis, but of a lower extent. GLN deficiency in medium enhanced GLN release and decreased intramuscular GLN concentration, decreased protein synthesis in muscles of intact and laparotomized rats, and enhanced leucine oxidation in SOL of intact and protein breakdown in SOL of laparotomized rats. It is concluded that (1) fast-twitch fibers are more sensitive to septic stimuli than slow-twitch fibers, (2) extracellular GLN deficiency may exert adverse effects on protein and amino acid metabolism in skeletal muscle, and (3) muscles of healthy and laparotomized animals are more sensitive to GLN deficiency than muscles of septic animals.  相似文献   

19.
We previously reported that endurance training increases amino acid catabolism. In this study, the effects of an acute endurance exercise bout on tissue protein levels and urea excretion have been investigated. Exhaustive exercising of trained rats resulted in an increase in ammonia excretion but there was no significant change in urea excretion. Protein levels of muscle and liver were significantly decreased by an exhaustive bout of exercise. In muscle, both the soluble and myofibrillar protein fractions were decreased in exhausted rats. These results demonstrate that during exercise there is a net loss of protein in muscle and liver.  相似文献   

20.
In order to use Ntau-methylhistidine (3-methylhistidine) excretion in the urine as a measure of muscle protein breakdown, it is necessary to demonstrate that other tissues are not important sources of this protein constituent. Accordingly, the concentration of Ntau-methylhistidine in blood serum and in the mixed proteins of heart, brain, lung, kidney, diaphragm, spleen, testis, stomach, liver and hind leg skeletal muscle was measured in male rats of approx. 400 g body weight. The free Ntau-methylhistidine concentration of rat serum was less than 2 nmol per ml. In contrast, measurable amounts of Ntau-methylhistidine were found in the mixed proteins of all tissues and organs examined. The highest concentration was found in skeletal muscle (658 nmol/g tissue). Assuming muscle mass to be 45% of body weight, it has been estimated that the muscle contains more than ten times the total amount of this amino acid present in all of the other organs analyzed, which together account for about 20% of total body weight. These findings indicate that skeletal muscle is likely to be the major source of urinary Ntau-methylhistidine and the latter is, in consequence, a reflection of myofibrillar protein breakdown in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号