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The ERG1 Potassium Channel is More Abundant in Skeletal Muscle from Cachectic than Healthy Humans

Authors :
Sandra Zampieri
Marco Sandri
Joseph L. Cheatwood
Rajesh P. Balaraman
Luke B. Anderson
Brittan A. Cobb
Chase D. Latour
Gregory H. Hockerman
Helmut Kern
Roberta Sartori
Barbara Ravara
Stefano Merigliano
Gianfranco Da Dalt
Judith K. Davie
Punit Kohli
Ugo Carraro
Amber L Pond
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Background: The ERG1a potassium channel has been detected in the atrophying skeletal muscle of mice experiencing either muscle disuse or cancer cachexia and further evidenced to contribute to muscle deterioration by enhancing ubiquitin proteolysis; however, to our knowledge, ERG1 has not been reported in human skeletal muscle. Methods and Results: Here, using immunohistochemistry, we detect ERG1 immunofluorescence in human Rectus abdominis skeletal muscle sarcolemma. Further, using single point brightness data, we report detection of ERG1 immunofluorescence at low levels in the Rectus abdominis muscle sarcolemma of young adult humans and show that it trends toward greater levels (10.6%) in healthy aged adults. Interestingly, we detect ERG1 immunofluorescence at a statistically greater level (53.6%; p

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cdc8d8a0a15696d8f9f91a72d84c092f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-17510/v1