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Activation of caspase-3 is an initial step triggering accelerated muscle proteolysis in catabolic conditions
Jie Du, Xiaonan Wang, Christiane Miereles, James L. Bailey, Richard Debigare, Bin Zheng, S. Russ Price, William E. Mitch
Jie Du, Xiaonan Wang, Christiane Miereles, James L. Bailey, Richard Debigare, Bin Zheng, S. Russ Price, William E. Mitch
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Article

Activation of caspase-3 is an initial step triggering accelerated muscle proteolysis in catabolic conditions

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Abstract

With trauma, sepsis, cancer, or uremia, animals or patients experience accelerated degradation of muscle protein in the ATP-ubiquitin-proteasome (Ub-P’some) system. The initial step in myofibrillar proteolysis is unknown because this proteolytic system does not break down actomyosin complexes or myofibrils, even though it degrades monomeric actin or myosin. Since cytokines or insulin resistance are common in catabolic states and will activate caspases, we examined whether caspase-3 would break down actomyosin. We found that recombinant caspase-3 cleaves actomyosin, producing a characteristic, approximately 14-kDa actin fragment and other proteins that are degraded by the Ub-P’some. In fact, limited actomyosin cleavage by caspase-3 yields a 125% increase in protein degradation by the Ub-P’some system. Serum deprivation of L6 muscle cells stimulates actin cleavage and proteolysis; insulin blocks these responses by a mechanism requiring PI3K. Cleaved actin fragments are present in muscles of rats with muscle atrophy from diabetes or chronic uremia. Accumulation of actin fragments and the rate of proteolysis in muscle stimulated by diabetes are suppressed by a caspase-3 inhibitor. Thus, in catabolic conditions, an initial step resulting in loss of muscle protein is activation of caspase-3, yielding proteins that are degraded by the Ub-P’some system. Therapeutic strategies could be designed to prevent these events.

Authors

Jie Du, Xiaonan Wang, Christiane Miereles, James L. Bailey, Richard Debigare, Bin Zheng, S. Russ Price, William E. Mitch

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Figure 7

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Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity and actin cleavage. (a) L6 cells ...
Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity and actin cleavage. (a) L6 cells were infected with an adenovirus that expresses GFP (AdGFP) or a dominant-negative PI3K (AdTrackp85ΔiSH2) and GFP. The cells were incubated in 0.5% FBS with or without 10 nM insulin, and PI3K activity was measured. The dominant-negative PI3K suppressed the ability of insulin to stimulate PI3K activity. PIP, phosphatidylinositol phosphate; Ori, origin of loading. (b) L6 cells were treated similarly and then subjected to Western blot to detect the actin fragment. The inhibition of PI3K activity abolished the ability of insulin to suppress the cleavage of actomyosin.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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