4.6 Article

Cellular Markers of Muscle Atrophy in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Journal

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2008-0382OC

Keywords

vastus lateralis; ubiquitin ligase; myostatin; neural precursor cell-expressed developmentally down-regulated 4; atrogin-1

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health
  2. Keenan Foundation
  3. St Michaels Hospital
  4. Ontario Thoracic Society

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Skeletal muscle atrophy in individuals with advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is associated with diminished quality of life, increased health resource use, and worsened survival. Muscle wasting results from an imbalance between protein degradation and synthesis, and is enhanced by decreased regenerative repair. We investigated the activation of cellular signaling networks known to mediate muscle atrophy and regulate muscle regenerative capacity in rodent models, in individuals with COPD (FEV1 < 50% predicted). Nine patients with COPD and nine control individuals were studied. Quadriceps femoris muscle isometric contractile force and cross-sectional area were confirmed to be significantly smaller in the patients with COPD compared with control subjects. The vastus lateralis muscle was biopsied and muscle transcript and/or protein levels of key components of ubiquitin-mediated proteolytic systems (MuRF1, atrogin-1, Nedd4), inflammatory mediators (I kappa B alpha, NF-kappa Bp65/p50), AKT network (AKT, GSK3 beta, p7056 kinase), mediators of autophagy (beclin-1, LC3), and myogenesis (myogenin, MyoD, Myf5, myostatin) were determined. Atrogin-1 and Nedd4, two ligases regulating ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation and myostatin, a negative regulator of muscle growth, were significantly increased in the muscle of patients with COPD. MuRF1, Myf5, myogenin, and MyoD were not differentially expressed. There were no differences in the level of phosphorylation of AKT, GSK3 beta, p70S6kinase, or I kappa B alpha, activation of NF-kappa Bp65 or NF-kappa Bp50, or level of expression of beclin-1 or LC3, suggesting that AKT signaling was not down-regulated and the NF-kappa B inflammatory pathway and autophagy were not activated in the COPD muscle. We conclude that muscle atrophy associated with COPD results from the recruitment of specific regulators of ubiquitin-mediated proteolytic pathways and inhibition of muscle growth.

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