56 research outputs found

    BDA-410 Treatment Reduces Body Weight and Fat Content by Enhancing Lipolysis in Sedentary Senescent Mice

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    Loss of muscle mass and force with age leads to fall risk, mobility impairment, and reduced quality of life. This article shows that BDA-410, a calpain inhibitor, induced loss of body weight and fat but not lean mass or skeletal muscle proteins in a cohort of sedentary 23-month-old mice. Food and water intake and locomotor activity were not modified, whereas BDA-410 treatment decreased intramyocellular lipid and perigonadal fat, increased serum nonesterified fatty acids, and upregulated the genes mediating lipolysis and oxidation, lean phenotype, muscle contraction, muscle transcription regulation, and oxidative stress response. This finding is consistent with our recent report that lipid accumulation in skeletal myofibers is significantly correlated with slower fiber-contraction kinetics and diminished power in obese older adult mice. A proteomic analysis and immunoblot showed downregulation of the phosphatase PPP1R12B, which increases phosphorylated myosin half-life and modulates the calcium sensitivity of the contractile apparatus. This study demonstrates that BDA-410 exerts a beneficial effect on skeletal muscle contractility through new, alternative mechanisms, including enhanced lipolysis, upregulation of "lean phenotype-related genes," downregulation of the PP1R12B phosphatase, and enhanced excitation- contraction coupling. This single compound holds promise for treating age-dependent decline in muscle composition and strength.Fil: Pereyra, Andrea Soledad. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata. Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas de La Plata "Prof. Dr. Rodolfo R. Brenner". Universidad Nacional de la Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas. Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas de La Plata ; Argentina. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Wang, Zhong-Min. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Messi, Maria Laura. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Zhang, Tan. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Wu, Hanzhi. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Register, Thomas C.. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Forbes, Elizabeth. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Devarie Baez, Nelmi O.. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Files, Daniel Clark. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Abba, Martín Carlos. Universidad Nacional de la Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas; ArgentinaFil: Furdui, Cristina. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Delbono, Osvaldo. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados Unido

    BDA-410 Treatment Reduces Body Weight and Fat Content by Enhancing Lipolysis in Sedentary Senescent Mice

    Get PDF
    Loss of muscle mass and force with age leads to fall risk, mobility impairment, and reduced quality of life. This article shows that BDA-410, a calpain inhibitor, induced loss of body weight and fat but not lean mass or skeletal muscle proteins in a cohort of sedentary 23-month-old mice. Food and water intake and locomotor activity were not modified, whereas BDA-410 treatment decreased intramyocellular lipid and perigonadal fat, increased serum nonesterified fatty acids, and upregulated the genes mediating lipolysis and oxidation, lean phenotype, muscle contraction, muscle transcription regulation, and oxidative stress response. This finding is consistent with our recent report that lipid accumulation in skeletal myofibers is significantly correlated with slower fiber-contraction kinetics and diminished power in obese older adult mice. A proteomic analysis and immunoblot showed downregulation of the phosphatase PPP1R12B, which increases phosphorylated myosin half-life and modulates the calcium sensitivity of the contractile apparatus. This study demonstrates that BDA-410 exerts a beneficial effect on skeletal muscle contractility through new, alternative mechanisms, including enhanced lipolysis, upregulation of "lean phenotype-related genes," downregulation of the PP1R12B phosphatase, and enhanced excitation- contraction coupling. This single compound holds promise for treating age-dependent decline in muscle composition and strength.Facultad de Ciencias MédicasInstituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas de La PlataCentro de Investigaciones Inmunológicas Básicas y Aplicada

    The sympathetic nervous system regulates skeletal muscle motor innervation and acetylcholine receptor stability

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    Aim: Symptoms of autonomic failure are frequently the presentation of advanced age and neurodegenerative diseases that impair adaptation to common physiologic stressors. The aim of this work was to examine the interaction between the sympathetic and motor nervous system, the involvement of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) in neuromuscular junction (NMJ) presynaptic motor function, the stability of postsynaptic molecular organization, and the skeletal muscle composition and function. Methods: Since muscle weakness is a symptom of diseases characterized by autonomic dysfunction, we studied the impact of regional sympathetic ablation on muscle motor innervation by using transcriptome analysis, retrograde tracing of the sympathetic outflow to the skeletal muscle, confocal and electron microscopy, NMJ transmission by electrophysiological methods, protein analysis, and state of the art microsurgical techniques, in C57BL6, MuRF1KO and Thy-1 mice. Results: We found that the SNS regulates motor nerve synaptic vesicle release, skeletal muscle transcriptome, muscle force generated by motor nerve activity, axonal neurofilament phosphorylation, myelin thickness, and myofibre subtype composition and CSA. The SNS also modulates the levels of postsynaptic membrane acetylcholine receptor by regulating the Gα i2 -Hdac4-Myogenin-MuRF1pathway, which is prevented by the overexpression of the guanine nucleotide-binding protein Gα i2 (Q205L), a constitutively active mutant G protein subunit. Conclusion: The SNS regulates NMJ transmission, maintains optimal Gα i2 expression, and prevents any increase in Hdac4, myogenin, MuRF1, and miR-206. SNS ablation leads to upregulation of MuRF1, muscle atrophy, and downregulation of postsynaptic AChR. Our findings are relevant to clinical conditions characterized by progressive decline of sympathetic innervation, such as neurodegenerative diseases and aging.Fil: Rodrigues, Anna C. Zaia. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Messi, Maria Laura. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Wang, Zhong Min. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Abba, Martín Carlos. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Médicas. Centro de Investigaciones Inmunológicas Básicas y Aplicadas; ArgentinaFil: Pereyra, Andrea Soledad. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - La Plata; Argentina. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Birbrair, Alexander. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Zhang, Tan. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: O´Meara, Meaghan. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Kwan, Ping. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Lopez, Elsa I. S.. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Willis, Monte S.. University of North Carolina; Estados UnidosFil: Mintz, Akiva. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Files, D. Clark. University of North Carolina; Estados UnidosFil: Furdui, Cristina. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Oppenheim, Ronald W.. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Delbono, Osvaldo. Wake Forest School of Medicine; Estados Unido

    BDA-410 Treatment Reduces Body Weight and Fat Content by Enhancing Lipolysis in Sedentary Senescent Mice

    Get PDF
    Loss of muscle mass and force with age leads to fall risk, mobility impairment, and reduced quality of life. This article shows that BDA-410, a calpain inhibitor, induced loss of body weight and fat but not lean mass or skeletal muscle proteins in a cohort of sedentary 23-month-old mice. Food and water intake and locomotor activity were not modified, whereas BDA-410 treatment decreased intramyocellular lipid and perigonadal fat, increased serum nonesterified fatty acids, and upregulated the genes mediating lipolysis and oxidation, lean phenotype, muscle contraction, muscle transcription regulation, and oxidative stress response. This finding is consistent with our recent report that lipid accumulation in skeletal myofibers is significantly correlated with slower fiber-contraction kinetics and diminished power in obese older adult mice. A proteomic analysis and immunoblot showed downregulation of the phosphatase PPP1R12B, which increases phosphorylated myosin half-life and modulates the calcium sensitivity of the contractile apparatus. This study demonstrates that BDA-410 exerts a beneficial effect on skeletal muscle contractility through new, alternative mechanisms, including enhanced lipolysis, upregulation of "lean phenotype-related genes," downregulation of the PP1R12B phosphatase, and enhanced excitation- contraction coupling. This single compound holds promise for treating age-dependent decline in muscle composition and strength.Facultad de Ciencias MédicasInstituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas de La PlataCentro de Investigaciones Inmunológicas Básicas y Aplicada

    The norm of composition operators on the Fock space

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    Transport and magnetic properties in MgB2

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    Magneto-transport and magnetic data on MgB2 polycrystalline samples are reported for applied magnetic fields up to 9 T. In the normal state we find that MgB2 compound has a temperature and field-dependent resistivity behavior like a simple metal. The critical magnetic field H c2 (T) and the irreversibility field Hirr(T) curves were determined. The Hall coefficient RH is slightly temperature dependent. Using the extracted data, we calculated the electronic mean free path, coherency length ξ0 and London penetration depth λL

    ABHD4 regulates adipocyte differentiation in vitro but does not affect adipose tissue lipid metabolism in mice

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    Alpha/beta hydrolase domain-containing protein 4 (ABHD4) catalyzes the deacylation of N-acyl phosphatidyl-ethanolamine (NAPE) and lyso-NAPE to produce glycerophospho-N-acyl ethanolamine (GP-NAE). Through a variety of metabolic enzymes, NAPE, lyso-NAPE, and GP-NAE are ultimately converted into NAE, a group of bioactive lipids that control many physiological processes including inflammation, cognition, food intake, and lipolysis (i.e., oleoylethanolamide or OEA). In a diet-induced obese mouse model, adipose tissue Abhd4 gene expression positively correlated with adiposity. However, it is unknown whether Abhd4 is a causal or a reactive gene to obesity. To fill this knowledge gap, we generated an Abhd4 knockout (KO) 3T3-L1 pre-adipocyte. During adipogenic stimulation, Abhd4 KO pre-adipocytes had increased adipogenesis and lipid accumulation, suggesting Abhd4 is responding to (a reactive gene), not contributing to (not a causal gene), adiposity, and may serve as a mechanism for protecting against obesity. However, we did not observe any differences in adiposity and metabolic outcomes between whole-body Abhd4 KO or adipocyte-specific Abhd4 KO mice and their littermate control mice (both male and female) on chow or a high-fat diet. This might be because we found that deletion of Abhd4 did not affect NAE such as OEA production, even though Abhd4 was highly expressed in adipose tissue and correlated with fasting adipose OEA levels and lipolysis. These data suggest that ABHD4 regulates adipocyte differentiation in vitro but does not affect adipose tissue lipid metabolism in mice despite nutrient overload, possibly due to compensation from other NAPE and NAE metabolic enzymes

    Sums of Products of Riemann Zeta Tails

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