Ribosome abundance regulates the recovery of skeletal muscle protein mass upon recuperation from postnatal undernutrition in mice

被引:27
|
作者
Fiorotto, Marta L. [1 ]
Davis, Teresa A. [1 ]
Sosa, Horacio A. [1 ]
Villegas-Montoya, Carolina [1 ]
Estrada, Irma [1 ]
Fleischmann, Ryan [1 ]
机构
[1] ARS, USDA, Childrens Nutr Res Ctr, Dept Pediat,Baylor Coll Med, Houston, TX 77030 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON | 2014年 / 592卷 / 23期
关键词
MATERNAL DIETARY-PROTEIN; CATCH-UP GROWTH; FOOD-INTAKE; INSULIN SENSITIVITY; BODY-COMPOSITION; FETAL-GROWTH; RATS; RESTRICTION; TRANSCRIPTION; EXPRESSION;
D O I
10.1113/jphysiol.2014.279067
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Key points Inadequate nutrient intake during early life can programme a low adult muscle mass. We have used a mouse model to identify the developmental window when the skeletal musculature is vulnerable to programming and to identify factors that limit the muscle's ability to respond when normal nutrition is restored. We established that the developmental age when nutritional rehabilitation occurs following an episode of poor nutrition, rather than the duration or severity of the nutrient restriction, is the critical factor that determines if muscle mass can be recuperated. The ability to recover depends on whether the muscles' translational capacity, i.e. ribosomal abundance, can increase sufficiently to raise protein synthesis rates sufficiently to accelerate protein deposition. We show that the ability to increase ribosomal abundance was associated with increased expression of the nucleolar transcription factor UBF (upstream binding factor), which regulates RNA polymerase 1 activity and rRNA transcription, the limiting factor for ribosomal production. Abstract Nutritionally-induced growth faltering in the perinatal period has been associated with reduced adult skeletal muscle mass; however, the mechanisms responsible for this are unclear. To identify the factors that determine the recuperative capacity of muscle mass, we studied offspring of FVB mouse dams fed a protein-restricted diet during gestation (GLP) or pups suckled from postnatal day 1 (PN1) to PN11 (E-UN), or PN11 to PN22 (L-UN) on protein-restricted or control dams. All pups were refed under control conditions following the episode of undernutrition. Before refeeding, and 2, 7 and 21days later, muscle protein synthesis was measured in vivo. There were no long-term deficits in protein mass in GLP and E-UN offspring, but in L-UN offspring muscle protein mass remained significantly smaller even after 18months (P<0.001). E-UN differed from L-UN offspring by their capacity to upregulate postprandial muscle protein synthesis when refed (P<0.001), a difference that was attributable to a transient increase in ribosomal abundance, i.e. translational capacity, in E-UN offspring (P<0.05); translational efficiency was similar across dietary treatments. The postprandial phosphorylation of Akt and extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases were similar among treatments. However, activation of the ribosomal S6 kinase 1 via mTOR (P<0.02), and total upstream binding factor abundance were significantly greater in E-UN than L-UN offspring (P<0.02). The results indicate that the capacity of muscles to recover following perinatal undernutrition depends on developmental age as this establishes whether ribosome abundance can be enhanced sufficiently to promote the protein synthesis rates required to accelerate protein deposition for catch-up growth.
引用
收藏
页码:5269 / 5286
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Recovery from impaired muscle growth arises from prolonged postnatal accretion of myonuclei in Atrx mutant mice
    Huh, Michael S.
    Young, Kevin G.
    Yan, Keqin
    Price-O'Dea, Tina
    Picketts, David J.
    PLOS ONE, 2017, 12 (11):
  • [22] Skeletal Muscle Disuse Atrophy and the Rehabilitative Role of Protein in Recovery from Musculoskeletal Injury
    Howard, Emily E.
    Pasiakos, Stefan M.
    Fussell, Maya A.
    Rodriguez, Nancy R.
    ADVANCES IN NUTRITION, 2020, 11 (04) : 989 - 1001
  • [23] The Effect of Feeding on Skeletal Muscle Protein Signaling During Recovery from Aerobic Exercise
    Undem, Miranda K.
    Reidy, Paul T.
    Konopka, Adam R.
    Hinkley, James M.
    Harber, Matthew P.
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2012, 27 : 584 - 584
  • [24] RESTORATIVE MECHANISMS REGULATING PROTEIN BALANCE IN SKELETAL MUSCLE DURING RECOVERY FROM SEPSIS
    Crowell, Kristen T.
    Soybel, David I.
    Lang, Charles H.
    SHOCK, 2017, 47 (04): : 463 - 473
  • [25] The Effect of Feeding on Skeletal Muscle Protein Signaling During Recovery from Aerobic Exercise
    Undem, Miranda K.
    Reidy, Paul T.
    Konopka, Adam R.
    Hinkley, James M.
    Harber, Matthew P.
    MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE, 2011, 43 (05): : 584 - 584
  • [26] Recovery from FOLFOX chemotherapy-induced systemic and skeletal muscle metabolic dysfunction in mice
    Halle, Jessica L. L.
    Counts, Brittany R. R.
    Paez, Hector G. G.
    Baumfalk, Dryden R. R.
    Zhang, Quan
    Mohamed, Junaith S. S.
    Glazer, Evan S. S.
    Puppa, Melissa J. J.
    Smuder, Ashley J. J.
    Alway, Stephen E. E.
    Carson, James A. A.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM, 2023, 325 (02): : E132 - E151
  • [27] The androgen receptor in mesenchymal progenitors regulates skeletal muscle mass via Igf1 expression in male mice
    Sakai, Hiroshi
    Uno, Hideaki
    Yamakawa, Harumi
    Tanaka, Kaori
    Ikedo, Aoi
    Uezumi, Akiyoshi
    Ohkawa, Yasuyuki
    Imai, Yuuki
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2024, 121 (39)
  • [28] Coingestion of protein with carbohydrate during recovery from endurance exercise stimulates skeletal muscle protein synthesis in humans
    Howarth, Krista R.
    Moreau, Natalie A.
    Phillips, Stuart M.
    Gibala, Martin J.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 2009, 106 (04) : 1394 - 1402
  • [29] Changes in skeletal muscle protein synthesis in trained adults during recovery from endurance exercise
    Vislocky, Lisa
    Gaine, P. Courtney
    Pikosky, Matthew
    Bolster, Douglas
    Ferrando, Arny
    Wolfe, Robert
    Rodriguez, Nancy
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2008, 22
  • [30] MERG1A Protein Abundance Increases in the Atrophied Skeletal Muscle of Denervated Mice, But Does Not Affect NFκB Activity
    Anderson, Luke B.
    Ravara, Barbara
    Hameed, Sohaib
    Latour, Chase D.
    Latour, Sawyer M.
    Graham, Valerie M.
    Hashmi, Mariam N.
    Cobb, Brittan
    Dethrow, Nicole
    Urazaev, Albert K.
    Davie, Judy K.
    Albertin, Giovanna
    Carraro, Ugo
    Zampieri, Sandra
    Pond, Amber L.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPATHOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 2021, 80 (08): : 776 - 788