1. Activation of an alternative NF-kappaB pathway in skeletal muscle during disuse atrophy.
- Author
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Hunter RB, Stevenson E, Koncarevic A, Mitchell-Felton H, Essig DA, and Kandarian SC
- Subjects
- Animals, B-Cell Lymphoma 3 Protein, Cell Nucleus metabolism, Consensus Sequence, Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay, Female, Genes, Reporter, Hindlimb Suspension adverse effects, I-kappa B Kinase, Models, Biological, Muscular Atrophy etiology, NF-kappa B p50 Subunit, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases metabolism, Proto-Oncogene Proteins metabolism, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 biosynthesis, Rats, Transcription Factors, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha metabolism, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Muscular Atrophy metabolism, NF-kappa B metabolism, Signal Transduction
- Abstract
Although cytokine-induced nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) pathways are involved in muscle wasting subsequent to disease, their potential role in disuse muscle atrophy has not been characterized. Seven days of hind limb unloading led to a 10-fold activation of an NF-kappaB-dependent reporter in rat soleus muscle but not the atrophy-resistant extensor digitorum longus muscle. Nuclear levels of p50 were markedly up-regulated, c-Rel was moderately up-regulated, Rel B was down-regulated, and p52 and p65 were unchanged in unloaded solei. The nuclear IkappaB protein Bcl-3 was increased. There was increased binding to an NF-kappaB consensus oligonucleotide, and this complex bound antibodies to p50, c-Rel, and Bcl-3 but not other NF-kappaB family members. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and TNF receptor-associated factor 2 protein were moderately down-regulated. There was no difference in p38, c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase or Akt activity, nor were activator protein 1 or nuclear factor of activated T cell-dependent reporters activated. Thus, whereas several NF-kappaB family members are up-regulated, the prototypical markers of cytokine-induced activation of NF-kappaB seen with disease-related wasting are not evident during disuse atrophy. Levels of an anti-apoptotic NF-kappaB target, Bcl-2, were increased fourfold whereas proapoptotic proteins Bax and Bak decreased. The evidence presented here suggests that disuse muscle atrophy is associated with activation of an alternative NF-kappaB pathway that involves the activation of p50 but not p65.
- Published
- 2002
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