4.7 Article

α-Hydroxyisocaproic Acid Decreases Protein Synthesis but Attenuates TNFα/IFNγ Co-Exposure-Induced Protein Degradation and Myotube Atrophy via Suppression of iNOS and IL-6 in Murine C2C12 Myotube

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13072391

Keywords

alpha-hydroxyisocaproic acid; TNF alpha; Interferon-gamma; AMPK; ERK; protein synthesis; myotube; atrophy; iNOS; IL-6

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The study showed that HICA decreased basal protein synthesis rates, but may attenuate skeletal muscle atrophy under cachexic conditions by maintaining a low level of protein degradation.
There is ongoing debate as to whether or not alpha-hydroxyisocaproic acid (HICA) positively regulates skeletal muscle protein synthesis resulting in the gain or maintenance of skeletal muscle. We investigated the effects of HICA on mouse C2C12 myotubes under normal conditions and during cachexia induced by co-exposure to TNF alpha and IFN gamma. The phosphorylation of AMPK or ERK1/2 was significantly altered 30 min after HICA treatment under normal conditions. The basal protein synthesis rates measured by a deuterium-labeling method were significantly lowered by the HICA treatment under normal and cachexic conditions. Conversely, myotube atrophy induced by TNF alpha/IFN gamma co-exposure was significantly improved by the HICA pretreatment, and this improvement was accompanied by the inhibition of iNOS expression and IL-6 production. Moreover, HICA also suppressed the TNF alpha/IFN gamma co-exposure-induced secretion of 3-methylhistidine. These results demonstrated that HICA decreases basal protein synthesis under normal or cachexic conditions; however, HICA might attenuate skeletal muscle atrophy via maintaining a low level of protein degradation under cachexic conditions.

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