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Ca2+-dependent proteolysis in muscle wasting

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY & CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 10, Pages 2134-2146

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocel.2005.03.010

Keywords

muscle wasting; calpains; cachexia; proteolysis; protein turnover

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Skeletal muscle wasting is a prominent feature of cachexia, a complex systemic syndrome that frequently complicates chronic diseases such as inflammatory and autoimmune disorders, cancer and AIDS. Muscle wasting may also develop as a manifestation of primary or neurogenic muscular disorders. It is now generally accepted that muscle depletion mainly arises from increased protein catabolism. The ubiquitin-proteasome system is believed to be the major proteolytic machinery in charge of such protein breakdown, yet there is evidence suggesting that Ca2+-dependent system, lysosomes and, in some conditions at least, even caspases are involved as well. The role of Ca2+-dependent proteolysis in skeletal muscle wasting is reviewed in the present paper. This system relies on the activity of calpains, a family of Ca2+-dependent cysteine proteases, whose regulation is complex and not completely elucidated. Modulations of Ca2+-dependent proteolysis have been associated with muscle protein depletion in various pathological contexts and particularly with muscle dystrophies. Calpains can only perform a limited proteolysis of their substrates, however they may play a critical role in initiating the breakdown of myofibrillar protein, by releasing molecules that become suitable for further degradation by proteasomes. Some evidence would also support a role for lysosomes and caspases in muscle wasting. Thus it cannot be excluded that different intracellular proteolytic systems may coordinately concur in shifting muscle protein turnover towards excess catabolism. Many different signals have been proposed as potentially involved in triggering the enhanced protein breakdown that underlies muscle wasting. How they are transduced to initiate the hypercatabolic response and to activate the proteolytic pathways remains largely unknown, however. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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