Abstract
Most of the increased protein degradation in muscle atrophy caused by starvation and denervation is due to activation of a non-lysosomal ATP-dependent proteolytic process. To determine whether expression of the ubiquitin-proteasome-dependent pathway is activated in atrophying muscles, we measured the levels of mRNA for ubiquitin (Ub) and proteasome subunits, and Ub content. After rats had been deprived of food for 1 or 2 days, the concentration of the two polyubiquitin (polyUb) transcripts increased 2-4-fold in the pale extensor digitorum longus muscle and 1-2.5-fold in the red soleus, whereas total muscle RNA and total mRNA content fell by 50%. After denervation of the soleus, there was a progressive 2-3-fold increase in polyUb mRNA for 1-3 days, whereas total RNA content fell. On starvation or denervation, Ub concentration in the muscles also rose by 60-90%. During starvation, polyUb mRNA levels also increased in heart, but not in liver, kidney, spleen, fat, brain or testes. Although the polyUb gene is a heat-shock gene that is induced in muscles under certain stressful conditions, the muscles of starving rats or after denervation did not express other heat-shock genes. On starvation or denervation, mRNA for several proteasome subunits (C-1, C-3, C-5, C-8 and C-9) also increased 2-4-fold in the atrophying muscles. When the food-deprived animals were re-fed, levels of Ub and proteasome mRNA in their muscles returned to control values within 1 day. In contrast, no change occurred in the levels of muscle mRNAs encoding cathepsin L, cathepsin D and calpain 1 on denervation or food deprivation. Thus polyUb and proteasome mRNAs increased in atrophying muscles in co-ordination with activation of the ATP-dependent proteolytic process.
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