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Publication : Effect of postdevelopmental myostatin depletion on myofibrillar protein metabolism.

First Author  Welle S Year  2011
Journal  Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab Volume  300
Issue  6 Pages  E993-E1001
PubMed ID  21406613 Mgi Jnum  J:172300
Mgi Id  MGI:5006892 Doi  10.1152/ajpendo.00509.2010
Citation  Welle S, et al. (2011) Effect of postdevelopmental myostatin depletion on myofibrillar protein metabolism. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 300(6):E993-E1001
abstractText  It is unclear whether the muscle hypertrophy induced by loss of myostatin signaling in mature muscles is maintained only by increased protein synthesis or whether reduced proteolysis contributes. To address this issue, we depleted myostatin by activating Cre recombinase for 2 wk in mature mice in which Mstn exon 3 was flanked by loxP sequences. The rate of phenylalanine tracer incorporation into myofibrillar proteins was determined 2, 5, and 24 wk after Cre activation ended. At all of these time points, myostatin-deficient mice had increased gastrocnemius and quadriceps muscle mass (>/=27%) and increased myofibrillar synthesis rate per gastrocnemius muscle (>/=19%) but normal myofibrillar synthesis rates per myofibrillar mass or RNA mass. Mean fractional myofibrillar degradation rates (estimated from the difference between rate of synthesis and rate of change in myofibrillar mass) and muscle concentrations of free 3-methylhistidine (from actin and myosin degradation) were unaffected by myostatin knockout. Overnight food deprivation reduced myofibrillar synthesis and ribosomal protein S6 phosphorylation and increased concentrations of 3-methylhistidine, muscle RING finger-1 mRNA, and atrogin-1 mRNA. Myostatin depletion did not affect these responses to food deprivation. These data indicate that maintenance of the muscle hypertrophy caused by loss of myostatin is mediated by increased protein synthesis per muscle fiber rather than suppression of proteolysis.
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