Abstract

Skeletal muscle protein turnover plays a crucial role in controlling muscle mass and protein quality control, including sarcomeric (structural and contractile) proteins. Protein turnover is a dynamic and continual process of protein synthesis and degradation. The ubiquitin proteasome system (UPS) is a key degradative system for protein degradation and protein quality control in skeletal muscle. UPS-mediated protein quality control is known to be impaired in aging and diseases. Exercise is a well-recognized, nonpharmacological approach to promote muscle protein turnover rates. Over the past decades, we have acquired substantial knowledge of molecular mechanisms of muscle protein synthesis after exercise. However, there have been considerable gaps in the mechanisms of how muscle protein degradation is regulated at the molecular level. The main challenge to understand muscle protein degradation is due in part to the lack of solid stable isotope tracer methodology to measure muscle protein degradation rate. Understanding the mechanisms of UPS with the concomitant measurement of protein degradation rate in skeletal muscle will help identify novel therapeutic strategies to ameliorate impaired protein turnover and protein quality control in aging and diseases. Thus, the goal of this present review was to highlight how recent advances in the field may help improve our understanding of exercise-mediated protein degradation. We discuss 1) the emerging roles of protein phosphorylation and ubiquitylation modifications in regulating proteasome-mediated protein degradation after exercise and 2) methodological advances to measure in vivo myofibrillar protein degradation rate using stable isotope tracer methods.

Highlights

  • Skeletal muscle is a highly plastic and adaptive organ

  • Skeletal muscle mass and protein quality control can be modulated by various physiological factors, such as hormones, nutrient and energy availability, and contractile activity/physical activity [1]

  • The current challenge for the field is the lack of accessible tools for studying protein ubiquitylation and degradation

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Skeletal muscle is a highly plastic and adaptive organ. Skeletal muscle mass and protein quality control can be modulated by various physiological factors, such as hormones, nutrient and energy availability, and contractile activity/physical activity [1]. Because UPS is known as a key mechanism controlling proteasome-mediated protein degradation, we need to understand exercise-mediated ubiquitin signaling in skeletal muscle. Knowledge of this can be used to interpret protein degradation outcomes, thereby obtaining a complete overview of protein turnover and protein quality control when combining our current understanding of protein synthesis mechanisms. Recent studies showed that both acute exercise [31, 45] and the functional overload [46] increase proteasome activity in both human and rodent skeletal muscle These studies highlight an essential role of UPS in protein quality control, muscle remodeling, and muscle adaptation to exercise. Protein ubiquitylation is considered to regulate both proteasome-mediated and autophagy lysosome-mediated protein degradation

Ligases in Skeletal Muscle
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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