Abstract

After severe burn injury, proinflammatory cytokine levels are elevated in serum and skeletal muscle, which in turn increases protein breakdown and decreases protein synthesis. In this study, C2C12 mouse skeletal muscle cell line myotubes were exposed to proinflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) as an in vitro cell-line model of catabolic response to burn injury and then treated with des-acyl ghrelin (DAG), a 28 amino acid polypeptide hormone thought to inhibit protein breakdown and increase protein synthesis, to assess its therapeutic potential. Nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabonomics was used to monitor metabolic activity of C2C12 myotubes under four treatment conditions: (1) control, (2) TNF-α/IFN-γ (TI), (3) DAG (DA), and (4) TNF-α/IFN-γ followed by DAG (TIDA) to assess the effect of DAG treatment on cellular metabolic response during basal or catabolic conditions. Twelve metabolites showed significant changes in concentrations following treatments in the hydrophilic cell extracts. Lactate (P < 10−4) and citrulline (P < 10−9) increased with TNF-α/IFN-γ treatment, indicating increased protein degradation, and returned to control levels in the TIDA group. Adenosine nucleotide levels had decreased trends in TI myotubes that returned to baseline levels after DAG treatment (P < 10−4). Guanidinoacetate and pantothenate, metabolites involved in protein synthesis and cell proliferation, had increased concentration trends following DAG treatment in both the DA and TIDA groups. Our metabonomics analysis provides further evidence that DAG counteracts the catabolic response caused by elevated muscle TNF-α/IFN-γ cytokine levels following severe burns and can play a potential therapeutic role in treatment of burn injury.

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