Abstract. One of the most important post-translational modifications is represented by phosphorylation on tyrosine, threonine and serine residues. Since abnormal phosphorylation is associated with various pathologies, it was of interest to perform a phosphoproteomic profiling of age-related skeletal muscle degeneration. We used the fluorescent phosphospecific Pro-Q Diamond dye to determine whether changes in the overall phosphorylation of the soluble skeletal muscle proteome differs significantly between young adult and senescent fibres. As an established model system of sarcopenia, we employed 30-month-old rat gastrocnemius fibres. Following the mass spectrometric identification of 59 major 2-D phosphoprotein landmark spots, the fluorescent dye staining survey revealed that 22 muscle proteins showed a differential expression pattern between 3-month-and 30-month-old muscle. Increased phosphorylation levels were shown for myosin light chain 2, tropomyosin α, lactate dehydrogenase, desmin, actin, albumin and aconitase. In contrast, decreased phospho-specific dye binding was observed for cytochrome c oxidase, creatine kinase and enolase. Thus, aging-induced alterations in phosphoproteins appear to involve the contractile machinery and the cytoskeleton, as well as the cytosolic and mitochondrial metabolism. This confirms that sarcopenia of old age is a complex neuromuscular pathology that is associated with drastic changes in the abundance and structure of key muscle proteins.
The age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass and associated progressive decline in contractile strength is a serious pathophysiological issue in the elderly. In order to investigate global changes in the skeletal muscle proteome after the fifth decade of life, this study analysed total extracts from human vastus lateralis muscle by fluorescence difference in-gel electrophoresis. Tissue specimens were derived from middle-aged (47–62 years) vs. aged (76–82 years) individuals and potential changes in the protein expression profiles were compared between these two age groups by a comprehensive gel electrophoresis-based survey. Age-dependent alterations in the concentration of 19 protein spots were revealed and mass spectrometry identified these components as being involved in the excitation-contraction-relaxation cycle, muscle metabolism, ion handling and the cellular stress response. This indicates a generally perturbed protein expression pattern in senescent human muscle. Increased levels of mitochondrial enzymes and isoform switching of the key contractile protein, actin, support the idea of glycolytic-to-oxidative and fast-to-slow transition processes during muscle aging. Importantly, the carbonic anhydrase (CA)3 isoform displayed an increased abundance during muscle aging, which was independently verified by immunoblotting of differently aged human skeletal muscle samples. Since the CA3 isoform is relatively muscle-specific and exhibits a fibre type-specific expression pattern, this enzyme may represent an interesting new biomarker of sarcopenia. Increased levels of CA are indicative of an increased demand of CO2-removal in senescent muscle, and also suggest age-related fibre type shifting to slower-contracting muscles during human aging.
a b s t r a c tAmyotrophic lateral sclerosis is the most common form of motor neuron disease in adult patients and characterized by progressive paralysis. The wobbler mouse (phenotype WR, genotype wr/wr) is an established animal model of human motor neuron disease and is characterized by a large variety of cellular abnormalities including muscular atrophy. In analogy to recent proteomic studies of cerebrospinal fluid and spinal cord, we have used here fluorescence difference in-gel electrophoresis to analyze global changes in the skeletal muscle proteome from WR versus normal mice. Relative concentrations of 21 proteins were found to be increased and 3 proteins were decreased. Mass spectrometric analysis identified these proteins to be associated with key metabolic pathways, the contractile apparatus, intermediate filaments and the cellular stress response. Drastically increased levels of the glycolytic enzyme glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase were confirmed by immunoblotting and this finding agrees with the idea of an oxidative-to-glycolytic shift in disease-related muscular atrophy. The establishment of novel disease-specific biomarkers of motor neuron disease might be helpful in the design of improved diagnostic tools and the identification of novel therapeutic targets.
Contractile weakness and loss of muscle mass are critical features of the aging process in mammalians. Age-related fibre wasting has a profound effect on muscle metabolism, fibre type distribution and the overall physiological integrity of the neuromuscular system. This study has used mass spectrometry-based proteomics to investigate the fate of the aging rat muscle proteome. Using nonionic detergent phase extraction, this report shows that the aged gastrocnemius muscle exhibits a generally perturbed protein expression pattern in both the detergent-extracted fraction and the aqueous protein complement from senescent muscle tissue. In the detergent-extracted fraction, the expression of ATP synthase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, enolase, tropomyosin and beta-actin was increased. Different isoforms of creatine kinase and prohibitin showed differential changes. In the aqueous fraction, malate dehydrogenase, sulfotransferase, triosephosphate isomerase, aldolase, cofilin-2 and lactate dehydrogenase showed increased levels. Interestingly, differential effects on dissimilar 2-D spots of the same protein species were shown for Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase, albumin, annexin A4 and phosphoglycolate phosphatase. Mitochondrial Hsp60, Hsp71 and nucleoside diphosphate kinase B exhibited a reduced abundance in aged muscle. The majority of altered proteins were found to be involved in mitochondrial metabolism, glycolysis, metabolic transportation, regulatory processes, the cellular stress response, detoxification mechanisms and muscle contraction.
In human globozoospermia, round-headed spermatozoa lack an acrosome and therefore cannot properly interact with oocytes. In the wobbler (WR) mouse, an L967Q missense mutation in the vesicular protein-sorting factor VPS54 causes motor neuron degeneration and globozoospermia. Although electron microscopy of WR testis shows all major components of spermatogenesis, they appear in a deranged morphology that prevents the formation of the acrosome. In order to determine proteome-wide changes, affected testes were analysed by 2D-DIGE and MS. The concentration of 8 proteins was increased and that of 35 proteins decreased as compared to wild type. Mass spectrometric analysis identified proteins with an altered concentration to be associated with metabolite transport, fatty acid metabolism, cellular interactions, microtubule assembly and stress response (chaperones Hsp70-2 and Hsp90␣). Minor changes were observed for proteins involved in cell redox homeostasis, cytoskeleton formation, PTMs, detoxification and metabolism. The most dramatically decreased protein in WR testis was identified as fatty acid binding protein FABP3, as confirmed by immunoblot analysis. We conclude that a missense mutation in VPS54, an essential component of the Golgi-associated retrograde protein complex, not only prevents the formation of an acrosome but also initiates a cascade of metabolic abnormalities and a stress reaction.
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