Abstract

Carnosine is a naturally occurring histidine-containing dipeptide present at high concentration in mammalian skeletal muscles. Carnosine was shown to affect muscle contraction, prevent the accumulation of oxidative metabolism by-products and act as an intracellular proton buffer maintaining the muscle acid-base balance. The present study was undertaken to gain additional knowledge about the intracellular mechanisms activated by carnosine in porcine myoblast cells under basal and oxidative stress conditions. Satellite cells were isolated from the skeletal muscles of 3 to 4 day-old piglets to study the effect of 0, 10, 25 and 50 mM carnosine pre-treatments in cells that were exposed (0.3 mM H2O2) or not to an H2O2-induced oxidative stress. Study results demonstrated that carnosine acts differently in myoblasts under oxidative stress and in basal conditions, the only exception being with the reduction of reactive oxygen species and protein carbonyls observed in both experimental conditions with carnosine pre-treatment. In oxidative stress conditions, carnosine pre-treatment increased the mRNA abundance of the nuclear factor, erythroid 2 like 2 (NEF2L2) transcription factor and several of its downstream genes known to reduce H2O2. Carnosine prevented the H2O2-mediated activation of p38 MAPK in oxidative stress conditions, whereas it triggered the activation of mTOR under basal conditions. Current results support the protective effect of carnosine against oxidative damage in porcine myoblast cells, an effect that would be mediated through the p38 MAPK intracellular signaling pathway. The activation of the mTOR signaling pathway under basal condition also suggest a role for carnosine in myoblasts proliferation, growth and survival.

Highlights

  • Our results demonstrate that carnosine may have a dual effect on myoblasts viability, with a cytoprotective effect in cells subjected to high oxidative stress (Fig 3B) and a decrease of myoblast viability when exposed to high carnosine concentrations (Fig 3A)

  • Results from the present study clearly demonstrate that carnosine acts differently in myoblasts exposed to an oxidative stress challenge and in basal conditions

  • The only exception is for the ROS and protein carbonyls data where carnosine decreased the accumulation of reactive oxygen species and reduced oxidative damage in both basal and oxidative stress conditions

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Summary

Materials and methods

Effect of carnosine in porcine myoblasts subjected or not to oxidative stress Cell viability was measured with the CellTiter 961 AQueous One Solution Cell Proliferation Assay (Promega). Effect of carnosine in porcine myoblasts subjected or not to oxidative stress Chemical, Ann Harbor, MI, USA), which measures the activities of Cu/Zn, Mn and Fe SODs. The total protein concentration was measured in each sample using the Bio-Rad Protein Assay (BIO-RAD). Cellular oxygen consumption rate analyses were performed using the Agilent Technologies Seahorse XFp analyzer (8 chambers; Seahorse Bioscience, North Billerica, MA, USA) and the Agilent Seahorse XFp Cell Mito Stress Test Kit. On day 1 of the assay, myoblasts were seeded in GM (4 x 103 cells/chamber) in six chambers of the Seahorse XFp Cell Culture Miniplate. Statistical significance was set at P 0.05 and tendencies at 0.05

Results and discussion
Concluding remarks
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