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Protein fractional synthesis rates within tissues of high- and low-active mice

With the rise in physical inactivity and its related diseases, it is necessary to understand the mechanisms involved in physical activity regulation. Biological factors regulating physical activity are studied to establish a possible target for improving the physical activity level. However, little...

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Autores principales: Cross, Kristina M., Granados, Jorge Z., Ten Have, Gabriella A. M., Thaden, John J., Engelen, Marielle P. K. J., Lightfoot, J. Timothy, Deutz, Nicolaas E. P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7703944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33253250
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242926
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author Cross, Kristina M.
Granados, Jorge Z.
Ten Have, Gabriella A. M.
Thaden, John J.
Engelen, Marielle P. K. J.
Lightfoot, J. Timothy
Deutz, Nicolaas E. P.
author_facet Cross, Kristina M.
Granados, Jorge Z.
Ten Have, Gabriella A. M.
Thaden, John J.
Engelen, Marielle P. K. J.
Lightfoot, J. Timothy
Deutz, Nicolaas E. P.
author_sort Cross, Kristina M.
collection PubMed
description With the rise in physical inactivity and its related diseases, it is necessary to understand the mechanisms involved in physical activity regulation. Biological factors regulating physical activity are studied to establish a possible target for improving the physical activity level. However, little is known about the role metabolism plays in physical activity regulation. Therefore, we studied protein fractional synthesis rate (FSR) of multiple organ tissues of 12-week-old male mice that were previously established as inherently low-active (n = 15, C3H/HeJ strain) and high-active (n = 15, C57L/J strain). Total body water of each mouse was enriched to 5% deuterium oxide (D(2)O) via intraperitoneal injection and maintained with D(2)O enriched drinking water for about 24 h. Blood samples from the jugular vein and tissues (kidney, heart, lung, muscle, fat, jejunum, ileum, liver, brain, skin, and bone) were collected for enrichment analysis of alanine by LC-MS/MS. Protein FSR was calculated as -ln(1-enrichment). Data are mean±SE as fraction/day (unpaired t-test). Kidney protein FSR in the low-active mice was 7.82% higher than in high-active mice (low-active: 0.1863±0.0018, high-active: 0.1754±0.0028, p = 0.0030). No differences were found in any of the other measured organ tissues. However, all tissues resulted in a generally higher protein FSR in the low-activity mice compared to the high-activity mice (e.g. lung LA: 0.0711±0.0015, HA: 0.0643±0.0020, heart LA: 0.0649± 0.0013 HA: 0.0712±0.0073). Our observations suggest that high-active mice in most organ tissues are no more inherently equipped for metabolic adaptation than low-active mice, but there may be a connection between protein metabolism of kidney tissue and physical activity level. In addition, low-active mice have higher organ-specific baseline protein FSR possibly contributing to the inability to achieve higher physical activity levels.
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spelling pubmed-77039442020-12-03 Protein fractional synthesis rates within tissues of high- and low-active mice Cross, Kristina M. Granados, Jorge Z. Ten Have, Gabriella A. M. Thaden, John J. Engelen, Marielle P. K. J. Lightfoot, J. Timothy Deutz, Nicolaas E. P. PLoS One Research Article With the rise in physical inactivity and its related diseases, it is necessary to understand the mechanisms involved in physical activity regulation. Biological factors regulating physical activity are studied to establish a possible target for improving the physical activity level. However, little is known about the role metabolism plays in physical activity regulation. Therefore, we studied protein fractional synthesis rate (FSR) of multiple organ tissues of 12-week-old male mice that were previously established as inherently low-active (n = 15, C3H/HeJ strain) and high-active (n = 15, C57L/J strain). Total body water of each mouse was enriched to 5% deuterium oxide (D(2)O) via intraperitoneal injection and maintained with D(2)O enriched drinking water for about 24 h. Blood samples from the jugular vein and tissues (kidney, heart, lung, muscle, fat, jejunum, ileum, liver, brain, skin, and bone) were collected for enrichment analysis of alanine by LC-MS/MS. Protein FSR was calculated as -ln(1-enrichment). Data are mean±SE as fraction/day (unpaired t-test). Kidney protein FSR in the low-active mice was 7.82% higher than in high-active mice (low-active: 0.1863±0.0018, high-active: 0.1754±0.0028, p = 0.0030). No differences were found in any of the other measured organ tissues. However, all tissues resulted in a generally higher protein FSR in the low-activity mice compared to the high-activity mice (e.g. lung LA: 0.0711±0.0015, HA: 0.0643±0.0020, heart LA: 0.0649± 0.0013 HA: 0.0712±0.0073). Our observations suggest that high-active mice in most organ tissues are no more inherently equipped for metabolic adaptation than low-active mice, but there may be a connection between protein metabolism of kidney tissue and physical activity level. In addition, low-active mice have higher organ-specific baseline protein FSR possibly contributing to the inability to achieve higher physical activity levels. Public Library of Science 2020-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7703944/ /pubmed/33253250 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242926 Text en © 2020 Cross et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cross, Kristina M.
Granados, Jorge Z.
Ten Have, Gabriella A. M.
Thaden, John J.
Engelen, Marielle P. K. J.
Lightfoot, J. Timothy
Deutz, Nicolaas E. P.
Protein fractional synthesis rates within tissues of high- and low-active mice
title Protein fractional synthesis rates within tissues of high- and low-active mice
title_full Protein fractional synthesis rates within tissues of high- and low-active mice
title_fullStr Protein fractional synthesis rates within tissues of high- and low-active mice
title_full_unstemmed Protein fractional synthesis rates within tissues of high- and low-active mice
title_short Protein fractional synthesis rates within tissues of high- and low-active mice
title_sort protein fractional synthesis rates within tissues of high- and low-active mice
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7703944/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33253250
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242926
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