Aging affects the transcriptional regulation of human skeletal muscle disuse atrophy

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Standard

Aging affects the transcriptional regulation of human skeletal muscle disuse atrophy. / Suetta, Charlotte; Frandsen, Ulrik; Nielsen, Line; Jensen, Mette Munk; Jespersen, Jakob G; Hvid, Lars Grøndahl; Bayer, Monika; Petersson, Stine Juhl; Schrøder, Henrik D; Andersen, Jesper L.; Heinemeier, Katja M; Aagaard, Per; Schjerling, Peter; Kjaer, Michael.

I: P L o S One, Bind 7, Nr. 12, 2012, s. e51238.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Suetta, C, Frandsen, U, Nielsen, L, Jensen, MM, Jespersen, JG, Hvid, LG, Bayer, M, Petersson, SJ, Schrøder, HD, Andersen, JL, Heinemeier, KM, Aagaard, P, Schjerling, P & Kjaer, M 2012, 'Aging affects the transcriptional regulation of human skeletal muscle disuse atrophy', P L o S One, bind 7, nr. 12, s. e51238. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051238

APA

Suetta, C., Frandsen, U., Nielsen, L., Jensen, M. M., Jespersen, J. G., Hvid, L. G., Bayer, M., Petersson, S. J., Schrøder, H. D., Andersen, J. L., Heinemeier, K. M., Aagaard, P., Schjerling, P., & Kjaer, M. (2012). Aging affects the transcriptional regulation of human skeletal muscle disuse atrophy. P L o S One, 7(12), e51238. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051238

Vancouver

Suetta C, Frandsen U, Nielsen L, Jensen MM, Jespersen JG, Hvid LG o.a. Aging affects the transcriptional regulation of human skeletal muscle disuse atrophy. P L o S One. 2012;7(12):e51238. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051238

Author

Suetta, Charlotte ; Frandsen, Ulrik ; Nielsen, Line ; Jensen, Mette Munk ; Jespersen, Jakob G ; Hvid, Lars Grøndahl ; Bayer, Monika ; Petersson, Stine Juhl ; Schrøder, Henrik D ; Andersen, Jesper L. ; Heinemeier, Katja M ; Aagaard, Per ; Schjerling, Peter ; Kjaer, Michael. / Aging affects the transcriptional regulation of human skeletal muscle disuse atrophy. I: P L o S One. 2012 ; Bind 7, Nr. 12. s. e51238.

Bibtex

@article{54c735c1fd704b9b99c4b967eaba4c4d,
title = "Aging affects the transcriptional regulation of human skeletal muscle disuse atrophy",
abstract = "Important insights concerning the molecular basis of skeletal muscle disuse-atrophy and aging related muscle loss have been obtained in cell culture and animal models, but these regulatory signaling pathways have not previously been studied in aging human muscle. In the present study, muscle atrophy was induced by immobilization in healthy old and young individuals to study the time-course and transcriptional factors underlying human skeletal muscle atrophy. The results reveal that irrespectively of age, mRNA expression levels of MuRF-1 and Atrogin-1 increased in the very initial phase (2-4 days) of human disuse-muscle atrophy along with a marked reduction in PGC-1a and PGC-1{\ss} (1-4 days) and a ~10% decrease in myofiber size (4 days). Further, an age-specific decrease in Akt and S6 phosphorylation was observed in young muscle within the first days (1-4 days) of immobilization. In contrast, Akt phosphorylation was unchanged in old muscle after 2 days and increased after 4 days of immobilization. Further, an age-specific down-regulation of MuRF-1 and Atrogin-1 expression levels was observed following 2 weeks of immobilization, along with a slowing atrophy response in aged skeletal muscle. Neither the immediate loss of muscle mass, nor the subsequent age-differentiated signaling responses could be explained by changes in inflammatory mediators, apoptosis markers or autophagy indicators. Collectively, these findings indicate that the time-course and regulation of human skeletal muscle atrophy is age dependent, leading to an attenuated loss in aging skeletal muscle when exposed to longer periods of immobility-induced disuse.",
author = "Charlotte Suetta and Ulrik Frandsen and Line Nielsen and Jensen, {Mette Munk} and Jespersen, {Jakob G} and Hvid, {Lars Gr{\o}ndahl} and Monika Bayer and Petersson, {Stine Juhl} and Schr{\o}der, {Henrik D} and Andersen, {Jesper L.} and Heinemeier, {Katja M} and Per Aagaard and Peter Schjerling and Michael Kjaer",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0051238",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "e51238",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Aging affects the transcriptional regulation of human skeletal muscle disuse atrophy

AU - Suetta, Charlotte

AU - Frandsen, Ulrik

AU - Nielsen, Line

AU - Jensen, Mette Munk

AU - Jespersen, Jakob G

AU - Hvid, Lars Grøndahl

AU - Bayer, Monika

AU - Petersson, Stine Juhl

AU - Schrøder, Henrik D

AU - Andersen, Jesper L.

AU - Heinemeier, Katja M

AU - Aagaard, Per

AU - Schjerling, Peter

AU - Kjaer, Michael

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Important insights concerning the molecular basis of skeletal muscle disuse-atrophy and aging related muscle loss have been obtained in cell culture and animal models, but these regulatory signaling pathways have not previously been studied in aging human muscle. In the present study, muscle atrophy was induced by immobilization in healthy old and young individuals to study the time-course and transcriptional factors underlying human skeletal muscle atrophy. The results reveal that irrespectively of age, mRNA expression levels of MuRF-1 and Atrogin-1 increased in the very initial phase (2-4 days) of human disuse-muscle atrophy along with a marked reduction in PGC-1a and PGC-1ß (1-4 days) and a ~10% decrease in myofiber size (4 days). Further, an age-specific decrease in Akt and S6 phosphorylation was observed in young muscle within the first days (1-4 days) of immobilization. In contrast, Akt phosphorylation was unchanged in old muscle after 2 days and increased after 4 days of immobilization. Further, an age-specific down-regulation of MuRF-1 and Atrogin-1 expression levels was observed following 2 weeks of immobilization, along with a slowing atrophy response in aged skeletal muscle. Neither the immediate loss of muscle mass, nor the subsequent age-differentiated signaling responses could be explained by changes in inflammatory mediators, apoptosis markers or autophagy indicators. Collectively, these findings indicate that the time-course and regulation of human skeletal muscle atrophy is age dependent, leading to an attenuated loss in aging skeletal muscle when exposed to longer periods of immobility-induced disuse.

AB - Important insights concerning the molecular basis of skeletal muscle disuse-atrophy and aging related muscle loss have been obtained in cell culture and animal models, but these regulatory signaling pathways have not previously been studied in aging human muscle. In the present study, muscle atrophy was induced by immobilization in healthy old and young individuals to study the time-course and transcriptional factors underlying human skeletal muscle atrophy. The results reveal that irrespectively of age, mRNA expression levels of MuRF-1 and Atrogin-1 increased in the very initial phase (2-4 days) of human disuse-muscle atrophy along with a marked reduction in PGC-1a and PGC-1ß (1-4 days) and a ~10% decrease in myofiber size (4 days). Further, an age-specific decrease in Akt and S6 phosphorylation was observed in young muscle within the first days (1-4 days) of immobilization. In contrast, Akt phosphorylation was unchanged in old muscle after 2 days and increased after 4 days of immobilization. Further, an age-specific down-regulation of MuRF-1 and Atrogin-1 expression levels was observed following 2 weeks of immobilization, along with a slowing atrophy response in aged skeletal muscle. Neither the immediate loss of muscle mass, nor the subsequent age-differentiated signaling responses could be explained by changes in inflammatory mediators, apoptosis markers or autophagy indicators. Collectively, these findings indicate that the time-course and regulation of human skeletal muscle atrophy is age dependent, leading to an attenuated loss in aging skeletal muscle when exposed to longer periods of immobility-induced disuse.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0051238

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0051238

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23284670

VL - 7

SP - e51238

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 12

ER -

ID: 44383957