scholarly journals The effect of insulin on free amino acid pools and protein synthesis in rat skeletal muscle in vitro

1971 ◽  
Vol 125 (3) ◽  
pp. 751-756 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Hider ◽  
E. B. Fern ◽  
D. R. London

1. The effects of insulin in vitro on tissue pools and incorporation into protein of glycine and leucine in the extensor digitorum longus muscle of the rat are reported. 2. It was found that insulin decreased the lag period before the establishment of a linear rate of incorporation of radioactive glycine into protein. 3. The hormone increased the size of the free intracellular glycine pool. No such effect was found for leucine. The accumulation of radioactive glycine in the intracellular fluid compartment was increased. The content of radioactive leucine in the intracellular compartment was decreased. 4. Insulin decreased the specific radioactivity of both glycine and leucine in the extracellular fluid. 5. The hormone also decreased protein catabolism. 6. The effect on protein synthesis was not caused by an increase in the specific radioactivity of the extracellular pool but was possibly related to increased amino acid concentrations in this pool, which could in turn have affected the aggregation of ribosomes.

1971 ◽  
Vol 121 (5) ◽  
pp. 817-827 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. C. Hider ◽  
E. B. Fern ◽  
D. R. London

1. The kinetics of radioactive labelling of extra- and intra-cellular amino acid pools and protein of the extensor digitorum longus muscle were studied after incubations with radioactive amino acids in vitro. 2. The results indicated that an extracellular pool could be defined, the contents of which were different from those of the incubation medium. 3. It was concluded that amino acids from the extracellular pool, as defined in this study, were incorporated directly into protein.


1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (12) ◽  
pp. 933-941 ◽  
Author(s):  
Njanoor Narayanan ◽  
Jacob Eapen

The effect of cycloheximide in vitro and in vivo on the incorporation of labelled amino acids into protein by muscles, liver, kidneys, and brain of rats and pigeons was studied. In vitro incorporation of amino acids into protein by muscle microsomes, myofibrils, and myofibrillar ribosomes was not affected by cycloheximide. In contrast, administration of the antibiotic into intact animals at a concentration of 1 mg/kg body weight resulted in considerable inhibition of amino acid incorporation into protein by muscles, liver, kidneys, and brain. This inhibition was observed in all the subcellular fractions of these tissues during a period of 10–40 min after the administration of the precursor. Tissue homogenates derived from in vivo cycloheximide-treated animals did not show significant alteration in in vitro amino acid incorporation with the exception of brain, which showed a small but significant enhancement.


1976 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. R. Turner ◽  
P. J. Reeds ◽  
K. A. Munday

1. Net amino acid uptake, and incorporation into protein have been measured in vitro in the presence and absence of porcine growth hormone (GH) in muscle from intact rabbits fed for 5 d on low-protein (LP), protein-free (PF) or control diets.2. In muscle from control and LP animals GH had no effect on the net amino acid uptake but stimulated amino acid incorporation into protein, although this response was less in LP animals than in control animals.3. In muscle from PF animals, GH stimulated both amino acid incorporation into protein and the net amino acid uptake, a type of response which also occurs in hypophysectomized animals. The magnitude of the effect of GH on the incorporation of amino acids into protein was reduced in muscle from PF animals.4. The effect of GH on the net amino acid uptake in PF animals was completely blocked by cycloheximide; the uptake effect of GH in these animals was dependent therefore on de novo protein synthesis.5. It is proposed that in the adult the role of growth hormone in protein metabolism is to sustain cellular protein synthesis when there is a decrease in the level of substrate amino acids, similar to that which occurs during a short-term fast or when the dietary protein intake is inadequate.


1980 ◽  
Vol 188 (1) ◽  
pp. 269-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clyde A. Watkins ◽  
D. Eugene Rannels

Compartmentalization of amino acid was investigated to define conditions required for accurate measurements of rates of protein synthesis in rat lungs perfused in situ. Lungs were perfused with Krebs–Henseleit bicarbonate buffer containing 4.5% (w/v) bovine serum albumin, 5.6mm-glucose, normal plasma concentrations of 19 amino acids, and 8.6–690μm-[U-14C]phenylalanine. The perfusate was equilibrated with the same humidified gas mixture used to ventilate the lungs [O2/CO2 (19:1) or O2/N2/CO2 (4:15:1)]. [U-14C]Phenylalanine was shown to be a suitable precursor for studies of protein synthesis in perfused lungs: it entered the tissue rapidly (t½, 81s) and was not converted to other compounds. As perfusate phenylalanine was decreased below 5 times the normal plasma concentration, the specific radioactivity of the pool of phenylalanine serving as precursor for protein synthesis, and thus [14C]phenylalanine incorporation into protein, declined. In contrast, incorporation of [14C]histidine into lung protein was unaffected. At low perfusate phenylalanine concentrations, rates of protein synthesis that were based on the specific radioactivity of phenylalanyl-tRNA were between rates calculated from the specific radioactivity of phenylalanine in the extracellular or intracellular pools. Rates based on the specific radioactivities of these three pools of phenylalanine were the same when extracellular phenylalanine was increased. These observations suggested that: (1) phenylalanine was compartmentalized in lung tissue; (2) neither the extracellular nor the total intracellular pool of phenylalanine served as the sole source of precursor for protein; (3) at low extracellular phenylalanine concentrations, rates of protein synthesis were in error if calculated from the specific radioactivity of the free amino acid; (4) at high extracellular phenylalanine concentrations, the effects of compartmentalization were negligible and protein synthesis could be calculated accurately from the specific radioactivity of the free or tRNA-bound phenylalanine pool.


2005 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 216
Author(s):  
P. Booth ◽  
T. Watson ◽  
H. Leese

Pre-implantation embryos can produce and consume amino acids in a manner dependent upon stage of embryonic development (Partridge and Leese 1996 Reprod. Fert. Dev. 8, 945) that may also be predictive of subsequent viability (Houghton et al. 2002 Hum. Reprod. 17, 999). To examine these relationships in the pig, the appearance or depletion of 18 amino acids from a presumptive near-physiological mixture was determined by HPLC in porcine in vitro-produced embryos from the zygote to the blastocyst stage. Cumulus oocyte complexes derived from slaughterhouse prepubertal pig ovaries were matured for 40 h in modified TCM-199 before being fertilized (Day 0) with frozen thawed semen in tris-based medium. After 6 h, presumptive zygotes were denuded and cultured in groups of 20 in NCSU medium modified to contain a physiological mixture of 18 amino acids including 0.1 mM glutamine (NCSUaa). Groups of 2–10 embryos (dependent on stage) were removed on Day 0 (1 cell), Day 1 (2- and 4-cell), Day 4 (compact morula), and Day 6 (blastocyst) and placed in 4 μL NCSUaa for 24 h. After incubation, the embryos were removed and the medium analyzed by HPLC. Each stage was replicated 3–9 times. Since amino acid profiles of 2- and 4-cell embryos were not different, data were combined. Overall, arginine (1.19 ± 0.33), glutamine (0.78 ± 0.34) and threonine (0.05 ± 0.04) were significantly (P < 0.01) depleted from the medium whereas alanine (0.21 ± 0.1), glycine (0.20 ± 0.06), asparagine (0.13 ± 0.5), lysine (0.1 ± 0.03), isoleucine (0.08 ± 0.01), valine (0.05 ± 0.01), leucine (0.04 ± 0.02), phenylalanine (0.03 ± 0.01), and histidine (0.02 ± 0.04) significantly (P < 0.05) accumulated (mean of the 4 sampling timepoints; all values pmol/embryo/h ± SEM). The difference between amino acid accumulation and depletion (balance) was approximately equivalent between Day 0 and the morula stage although turnover (sum of depletion and accumulation) steadily decreased during this period from 3.1 on Day 0 to 1.35 pmol/embryo/h at the morula stage. However, at the blastocyst stage, turnover and balance increased to 6.32 and 2.42 pmol/embryo/h, respectively, i.e. net appearance occurred. Notable changes in amino acid profile during development included decreases in accumulation of asparagine, glutamate, and glycine in the medium and the depletion of glutamine over Days 0, 1, and 4, followed by reversal of these trends by Day 6. These data suggest that pig embryos can alter the accumulation and depletion rates of amino acids in a manner that is dependent on the specific amino acid and the stage of embryonic development. This work was supported by BBSRC.


1983 ◽  
Vol 210 (2) ◽  
pp. 323-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
W S Stirewalt ◽  
R B Low

Rates of protein synthesis and degradation were measured in the isolated rat epitrochlearis muscle by radiotracer techniques, by using the specific radioactivity of tRNA-bound amino acid as precursor for protein synthesis. The tissue maintained linear rates of protein synthesis for 3 h of incubation in the presence of amino acids and glucose and in the absence of insulin. Under these conditions, however, the muscles were in negative nitrogen balance, with rates of protein degradation exceeding rates of protein synthesis. Under steady-state conditions of labelling, the specific radioactivities of tRNA-bound leucine, phenylalanine and valine were significantly less than their respective values in the incubation medium, at concentrations in the medium varying from 1 to 10 times those in normal rat serum. Insulin caused a dose- and time-dependent increase in tRNA-based protein synthesis rates, more than doubling rates at 5 and 50 ng of insulin/ml. At the lower, physiological, concentration of insulin, the stimulation of protein synthesis was not observed until the third hour of incubation with the hormone, whereas the rate of protein synthesis at the higher concentration was elevated during the second hour. There were no delays in the stimulation by insulin of glucose conversion into glycogen. The delayed stimulatory effects of insulin on the rate of protein synthesis brought the tissue to a nitrogen balance near zero. The presence of the hormone also prevented the increase in the rate of protein degradation seen in the third hour of incubation in the absence of the hormone. These studies demonstrate the viability of the incubated rat epitrochlearis muscle with respect to protein metabolism and sensitivity to the protein anabolic effects of physiological concentrations of insulin, and indicate that the preparation is a suitable experimental model for the study of the control of protein metabolism in fast-twitch skeletal muscle.


1974 ◽  
Vol 140 (3) ◽  
pp. 549-556 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. L. Boeckx ◽  
K. Dakshinamurti

The effect of administration of biotin to biotin-deficient rats on protein biosynthesis was studied. Biotin treatment resulted in stimulation by more than twofold of amino acid incorporation into protein, both in vivo and in vitro in rat liver, pancreas, intestinal mucosa and skin. Analysis of the products of amino acid incorporation into liver proteins in vivo and in vitro indicated that the synthesis of some proteins was stimulated more than twofold, but others were not stimulated at all. This indicates a specificity in the stimulation of protein synthesis mediated by biotin.


1999 ◽  
Vol 65 (8) ◽  
pp. 3279-3286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiaoping Yuan ◽  
James J. Pestka ◽  
Brandon M. Hespenheide ◽  
Leslie A. Kuhn ◽  
John E. Linz ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Monoclonal antibody 6F5 (mAb 6F5), which recognizes the mycotoxin deoxynivalenol (DON) (vomitoxin), was used to select for peptides that mimic the mycotoxin by employing a library of filamentous phages that have random 7-mer peptides on their surfaces. Two phage clones selected from the random peptide phage-displayed library coded for the amino acid sequences SWGPFPF and SWGPLPF. These clones were designated DONPEP.2 and DONPEP.12, respectively. The results of a competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) suggested that the two phage displayed peptides bound to mAb 6F5 specifically at the DON binding site. The amino acid sequence of DONPEP.2 plus a structurally flexible linker at the C terminus (SWGPFPFGGGSC) was synthesized and tested to determine its ability to bind to mAb 6F5. This synthetic peptide (designated peptide C430) and DON competed with each other for mAb 6F5 binding. When translationally fused with bacterial alkaline phosphatase, DONPEP.2 bound specifically to mAb 6F5, while the fusion protein retained alkaline phosphatase activity. The potential of using DONPEP.2 as an immunochemical reagent in a DON immunoassay was evaluated with a DON-spiked wheat extract. When peptide C430 was conjugated to bovine serum albumin, it elicited antibody specific to peptide C430 but not to DON in both mice and rabbits. In an in vitro translation system containing rabbit reticulocyte lysate, synthetic peptide C430 did not inhibit protein synthesis but did show antagonism toward DON-induced protein synthesis inhibition. These data suggest that the peptides selected in this study bind to mAb 6F5 and that peptide C430 binds to ribosomes at the same sites as DON.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document