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Protein Carbonylation and Heat Shock Proteins in Human Skeletal Muscle: Relationships to Age and Sarcopenia

Beltran Valls, Maria R.; Wilkinson, Daniel J.; Narici, Marco V.; Phillips, Bethan E.; Smith, Kenneth; Caporossi, Daniela; Atherton, Philip J.

Protein Carbonylation and Heat Shock Proteins in Human Skeletal Muscle: Relationships to Age and Sarcopenia Thumbnail


Authors

Maria R. Beltran Valls

Marco V. Narici

Daniela Caporossi



Abstract

Aging is associated with a gradual loss of muscle mass termed sarcopenia, which has significant impact on quality-of-life. Because oxidative stress is proposed to negatively impact upon musculoskeletal aging, we investigated links between human aging and markers of oxidative stress, and relationships to muscle mass and strength in young and old nonsarcopenic and sarcopenic adults. Sixteen young and 16 old males (further subdivided into “old” and “old sarcopenic”) were studied. The abundance of protein carbonyl adducts within skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic, myofibrillar, and mitochondrial protein subfractions from musculus vastus lateralis biopsies were determined using Oxyblot immunoblotting techniques. In addition, concentrations of recognized cytoprotective proteins (eg, heat shock proteins [HSP], αβ-crystallin) were also assayed. Aging was associated with increased mitochondrial (but not myofibrillar or sarcoplasmic) protein carbonyl adducts, independently of (stage-I) sarcopenia. Correlation analyses of all subjects revealed that mitochondrial protein carbonyl abundance negatively correlated with muscle strength ([1-repetition maximum], p = .02, r2 = −.16), but not muscle mass (p = .13, r2 = −.08). Abundance of cytoprotective proteins, including various HSPs (HSP 27 and 70), were unaffected by aging/sarcopenia. To conclude, these data reveal that mitochondrial protein carbonylation increases moderately with age, and that this increase may impact upon skeletal muscle function, but is not a hallmark of (stage-I) sarcopenia, per se.

Citation

Beltran Valls, M. R., Wilkinson, D. J., Narici, M. V., Phillips, B. E., Smith, K., Caporossi, D., & Atherton, P. J. (2015). Protein Carbonylation and Heat Shock Proteins in Human Skeletal Muscle: Relationships to Age and Sarcopenia. Journals of Gerontology, Series A, 70(2), 174-181. https://doi.org/10.1093/gerona/glu007

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 14, 2014
Online Publication Date Mar 12, 2014
Publication Date 2015-02
Deposit Date Sep 6, 2018
Publicly Available Date Oct 8, 2020
Journal Journals of Gerontology, Series A
Print ISSN 1079-5006
Electronic ISSN 1758-535X
Publisher Oxford University Press (OUP)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 70
Issue 2
Pages 174-181
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/gerona/glu007
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1100321
Publisher URL https://academic.oup.com/biomedgerontology/article/70/2/174/592557
PMID 24621945

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