4.7 Article

Lysosomal and proteasome-dependent proteolysis are differentially regulated by insulin and/or amino acids following feeding in young, mature and old rats

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUTRITIONAL BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 20, Issue 8, Pages 570-576

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnutbio.2008.05.017

Keywords

Aging; Insulin; Amino acids; Proteasome-dependent proteolysis; Lysosomal proteolysis

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Skeletal muscle proteolysis is inhibited by oral feeding in the young and mature but not in the elderly. However, the proteolytic pathway (s) responsible for the decreased muscle proteolysis in the postprandial (PP) state is (are) unknown in the young. Moreover, muscle proteolysis is inhibited by both insulin (INS) and amino acids (AA) in vitro, but their respective roles on specific proteolytic pathways in vivo remain to be elucidated. The aim of this study was to investigate the respective role of INS and AA on the inhibition of proteolytic pathways in the PP state in skeletal muscles from young, mature and old rats. Rats were fed over I h either a 25% (AA+) or a 0% (AA-) amino acid/protein meal. In each nutritional condition, PP insulin secretion was maintained (AA+/INS+ and AA-/INS+) or blocked (AA+/INS- and AA -/INS-) with diazoxide injections. We report that the PP inhibition of proteolysis in young rats was mediated by the increased INS secretion and resulted from a down-regulation of both lysosomal and Ca2+-dependent proteolysis. Moreover, our data showed that proteasome activities are inhibited by either INS or AA in mature rats, whereas they become selectively insensitive to AA in old rats. In conclusion, the present work provides direct evidence that the lack of PP regulation of proteasome-dependent proteolysis in old rats resulted from a selective resistance to AA. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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