Abstract

BackgroundCalpains, a superfamily of intracellular calcium-dependent cysteine proteases, are involved in the cytoskeletal remodeling and wasting of skeletal muscle. Calpains are generated as inactive proenzymes which are activated by N-terminal autolysis induced by calcium-ions.Methodology/Principal FindingsIn this study, we characterized the full-length cDNA sequences of three calpain genes, clpn1, clpn2, and clpn3 in channel catfish, and assessed the effect of nutrient restriction and subsequent re-feeding on the expression of these genes in skeletal muscle. The clpn1 cDNA sequence encodes a protein of 704 amino acids, Clpn2 of 696 amino acids, and Clpn3 of 741 amino acids. Phylogenetic analysis of deduced amino acid sequences indicate that catfish Clpn1 and Clpn2 share a sequence similarity of 61%; catfish Clpn1 and Clpn3 of 48%, and Clpn2 and Clpn3 of only 45%. The domain structure architectures of all three calpain genes in channel catfish are similar to those of other vertebrates, further supported by strong bootstrap values during phylogenetic analyses. Starvation of channel catfish (average weight, 15–20 g) for 35 days influenced the expression of clpn1 (2.3-fold decrease, P<0.05), clpn2 (1.3-fold increase, P<0.05), and clpn3 (13.0-fold decrease, P<0.05), whereas the subsequent refeeding did not change the expression of these genes as measured by quantitative real-time PCR analysis. Calpain catalytic activity in channel catfish skeletal muscle showed significant differences only during the starvation period, with a 1.2- and 1.4- fold increase (P<0.01) after 17 and 35 days of starvation, respectively.Conclusion/SignificanceWe have assessed that fasting and refeeding may provide a suitable experimental model to provide us insight into the role of calpains during fish muscle atrophy and how they respond to changes in nutrient supply.

Highlights

  • Calpains constitute a superfamily of intracellular calciumdependent cysteine proteases composed of one or two subunits

  • The cDNA sequences of the three genes in this work were obtained from our assembled full-length cDNAs generated from RNA-Seq assembly of a doubled haploid channel catfish [27]

  • Several studies showed that these proteins are directly or indirectly involved in differentiation, atrophy, and regeneration of muscle and it is evident that they are involved to a major degree in certain types of muscular dystrophy [37,38,39]

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Summary

Introduction

Calpains constitute a superfamily of intracellular calciumdependent cysteine proteases composed of one or two subunits. Many studies have focused on two mammalian isoforms, the mand m-calpains (known as Clpn and Clpn, respectively), at least 15 different mRNAs or genes encoding polypeptides with sequence homology to the calpains have been identified in vertebrates [1]. The Clpn and Clpn isoforms share a 50–60% homology but differ in their in vitro sensitivity to calcium [2,3]. These two isoforms are ubiquitously expressed in vertebrates, the expression of another family member of the calpains, calpain (Clpn3), is limited to skeletal muscle. A superfamily of intracellular calcium-dependent cysteine proteases, are involved in the cytoskeletal remodeling and wasting of skeletal muscle. Calpains are generated as inactive proenzymes which are activated by Nterminal autolysis induced by calcium-ions

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