Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0006625 (cachexia)
5,650 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Interleukin-15 (IL-15) is a novel anabolic factor for skeletal muscle which inhibits muscle wasting associated with cancer (cachexia) in a rat model. To develop a cell culture system in which the mechanism of the anabolic action of IL-15 on skeletal muscle could be examined, the mouse C2 skeletal myogenic cell line was transduced with a retroviral expression vector for IL-15 and compared to sister cells transduced with a control vector. Overexpression of IL-15 induced fivefold higher levels of sarcomeric myosin heavy chain and alpha-actin accumulation in differentiated myotubes. Secreted factors from IL-15-overexpressing myogenic cells, but not from control cells, induced increased myofibrillar protein accumulation in cocultured control myotubes. IL-15 overexpression induced a hypertrophic myotube morphology similar to that described for cultured myotubes which overexpressed the well-characterized anabolic factor insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I). However, in contrast to IGF-I, the hypertrophic action of IL-15 on skeletal myogenic cells did not involve stimulation of skeletal myoblast proliferation or differentiation. IL-15 induced myotube hypertrophy at both low and high IGF-I concentrations. Furthermore, in contrast to IGF-I, which stimulated only protein synthesis under these culture conditions, IL-15 both stimulated protein synthesis and inhibited protein degradation in cultured skeletal myotubes. These findings indicate that IL-15 action on skeletal myogenic cells is distinct from that of IGF-I. Due to the ability of IGF-I to stimulate cell division and its association with several forms of cancer, controversy exists concerning the advisability of treating cachexia or age-associated muscle wasting with IGF-I. Administration of IL-15 or modulation of the IL-15 signaling pathway may represent an alternative strategy for maintaining skeletal muscle mass under these conditions.
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PMID:Overexpression of interleukin-15 induces skeletal muscle hypertrophy in vitro: implications for treatment of muscle wasting disorders. 1237 39

Cachexia is a syndrome characterized by wasting of skeletal muscle and contributes to nearly one-third of all cancer deaths. Cytokines and tumor factors mediate wasting by suppressing muscle gene products, but exactly which products are targeted by these cachectic factors is not well understood. Because of their functional relevance to muscle architecture, such targets are presumed to represent myofibrillar proteins, but whether these proteins are regulated in a general or a selective manner is also unclear. Here we demonstrate, using in vitro and in vivo models of muscle wasting, that cachectic factors are remarkably selective in targeting myosin heavy chain. In myotubes and mouse muscles, TNF-alpha plus IFN-gamma strongly reduced myosin expression through an RNA-dependent mechanism. Likewise, colon-26 tumors in mice caused the selective reduction of this myofibrillar protein, and this reduction correlated with wasting. Under these conditions, however, loss of myosin was associated with the ubiquitin-dependent proteasome pathway, which suggests that mechanisms used to regulate the expression of muscle proteins may be cachectic factor specific. These results shed new light on cancer cachexia by revealing that wasting does not result from a general downregulation of muscle proteins but rather is highly selective as to which proteins are targeted during the wasting state.
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PMID:Cancer cachexia is regulated by selective targeting of skeletal muscle gene products. 1528 3

Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) has been associated with cachexia and is known to regulate multiple inflammatory cell (neutrophil and macrophage) responses. We tested the hypothesis that neutrophils and macrophages accumulate in the extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus muscles of mice after chronic TNF-alpha administration. Murine recombinant TNF-alpha (approximately 100 microg x kg(-1) x day(-1)) in vehicle solution or vehicle solution alone (sham) was administered to C57BL/6 mice for 7 days via osmotic minipumps. In EDL muscles from TNF-alpha-treated mice, neutrophil and macrophage concentrations were elevated seven- and threefold, respectively, compared with sham mice. Neutrophil and macrophage concentrations were also elevated five- and twofold, respectively, in solei of TNF-alpha- relative to sham-treated mice. Treatment with TNF-alpha elevated ubiquitin content by approximately 25% relative to sham values for both the EDL and soleus muscles; however, these elevations were not statistically significant. No differences were observed between TNF-alpha- and sham-treated mice in body weight, food consumption, muscle mass, myofiber cross-sectional area, carbonyl groups, total protein content, or relative abundance of myosin heavy chain protein. Furthermore, no overt signs of muscle injury or regeneration were observed in muscles from TNF-alpha-treated mice in either the EDL or soleus muscles. These observations suggest that 7 days of TNF-alpha administration promote muscle inflammation as indicated by the accumulation of neutrophils and macrophages without overt signs of atrophy, injury, or regeneration.
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha promotes the accumulation of neutrophils and macrophages in skeletal muscle. 1684 May 74

Discovering approaches to maintain or improve muscle function (fatigue resistance) in patients with cachexia, postoperative weakness, and sarcopenia is of clinical importance. beta(2)-Agonist treatment increases muscle mass, yet it alters fiber proportions such that the net consequences on muscle function remain unclear. In the present study, we focus on the contractile and metabolic consequences of chronic treatment with the beta(2)-agonist prodrug BRL-47672 (BRL). Gastrocnemius-plantaris-soleus (GPS) muscles were harvested at rest and studied for fatigue characteristics during 4 and 20 s of isometric stimulation (30 Hz; 10 V; 200 ms) using the perfused hind limb model. BRL treatment increased GPS mass by 21% (P < 0.05), whereas greater fatigue occurred during 20 s of contraction (45% less work; P < 0.05). Phenotypically, BRL resulted in 17% more type IIb myosin heavy chain protein expression (P < 0.001) and greater adenine nucleotide catabolism during 20 s of contraction (P < 0.05). Chronic BRL treatment impaired maximal lipid oxidation capacity by 30% (P < 0.05) and reduced glutamate dehydrogenase activity by 15% (P < 0.05). We conclude that beta(2)-agonist induced muscle hypertrophy may be clinically limited as impaired energy metabolism and function occur, presumably as a consequence of the shift in muscle phenotype.
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PMID:Chronic treatment with the beta(2)-adrenoceptor agonist prodrug BRL-47672 impairs rat skeletal muscle function by inducing a comprehensive shift to a faster muscle phenotype. 1684 43

In animal models of cachexia, alterations in the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K)/Akt pathway have been demonstrated in atrophying skeletal muscles. Therefore, we assessed the activity of proteins in this pathway in muscle and liver biopsies from 16 patients undergoing pancreatectomy for suspect of carcinoma. Patients were divided in a non-cachectic or cachectic group according to their weight loss before operation. Extracts of skeletal muscle and liver tissue from eight cachectic patients with pancreas carcinoma and eight non-cachectic patients were analysed by Western blotting using pan- and phospho-specific antibodies directed against eight important signal transduction proteins of the PI3-K/Akt pathway. Muscle samples from cachectic patients revealed significantly decreased levels of myosin heavy chain (-45%) and actin (-18%) in comparison to non-cachectic samples. Akt protein level was decreased by -55%. The abundance and/or phosphorylation of the transcription factors Foxo1 and Foxo3a were reduced by up to fourfold in muscle biopsies from cachectic patients. Various decreases of the phosphorylated forms of the protein kinases mTOR (-82%) and p70S6K (-39%) were found. In contrast to skeletal muscle, cachexia is associated with a significant increase in phosphorylated Akt level in the liver samples with a general activation of the PI3-K/Akt cascade. Our study demonstrates a cachexia-associated loss of Akt-dependent signalling in human skeletal muscle with decreased activity of regulators of protein synthesis and a disinhibition of protein degradation.
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PMID:Activity of the Akt-dependent anabolic and catabolic pathways in muscle and liver samples in cancer-related cachexia. 1733 95

Cachexia is common in chronic inflammatory diseases and is attributed, in part, to an elevation of circulating proinflammatory cytokines. TNF-alpha is the prototype in this category. IFN-gamma is also thought to play a role, but the evidence supporting this model is primarily indirect. To determine the direct effects of IFN-gamma stimulation on muscle cells, we selected key components of the procatabolic signaling pathways by which TNF-alpha stimulates protein loss. We tested two hypotheses: 1) IFN-gamma mimics TNF-alpha signaling by increasing intracellular oxidant activity and activating MAPKs and NF-kappaB and 2) IFN-gamma increases the expression of the ubiquitin ligases atrogin1/MAFbx and muscle-specific ring finger protein 1 (MuRF1). Results showed that treatment with IFN-gamma at 60 ng/ml increased Stat1 phosphorylation after 15 min, indicating receptor activation. IFN-gamma had no effect on cytosolic oxidant activity, as measured by 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein oxidation. Nor did IFN-gamma activate JNK, ERK1/2, or p38 MAPK, as assessed by Western blot. Treatment for up to 60 min did not decrease IkappaB-alpha protein levels, as measured by Western blot analysis, or the DNA binding activity of NF-kappaB, as measured by EMSA. After 6 h, IFN-gamma decreased Akt phosphorylation and increased atrogin1/MAFbx and MuRF1 mRNA. Daily treatment for up to 72 h did not alter adult fast-type myosin heavy chain content or the total protein-to-DNA ratio. These data show that responses of myotubes to IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha differ markedly and provide little evidence for a direct catabolic effect of IFN-gamma on muscle.
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PMID:IFN-gamma does not mimic the catabolic effects of TNF-alpha. 1792 38

There is no universal approach to stop muscle cachexia in a number of life-threatening diseases. Accordingly, it is uncertain why the body mass is so critical to keep alive patients with cancer, congestive heart failure (CHF), AIDS or sepsis. At present, it is widely believed that excess muscle wasting diminishes lean body mass to the risky level accompanied by anorexia, anemia, lipolysis, acute phase response and insulin resistance. If missed and/or untreated muscle cachexia inevitably leads to death due to cardiac and respiratory failure (almost one-third of all cancer deaths). This complex metabolic disorder is suited by the elevated levels of inflammatory cytokines (TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, IL-1-beta, IL-6, IL-2) and low levels of anti-inflammatory/ other cytokines (IL-15, leptin). Concurrently, tissue sensitivity to insulin is considerably reduced. Recent findings indicate that entirely few muscle-specific genes (i.e. MyoD and myosin heavy chain, MyHC) and their products must be targeted to initiate muscle wasting. Muscle atrophy occurs at different levels, starting from repressed gene expression and ended with accelerated protein degradation. Muscle growth (myogenesis) is severely compromised and disruption of sarcomere architecture heralds the proteolysis of contractile apparatus. This review aims to synthesize our present knowledge of intracellular mechanisms and molecular regulation of muscle cachexia with respect to cytokine signaling.
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PMID:Crossroads of cytokine signaling--the chase to stop muscle cachexia. 1926 84

The tissue-specific expressions of creatine kinase (CK) isoforms are regulated by the coordinated action of various transcription factors. The myogenic differentiation factor D (MyoD) family of proteins and the myocyte-specific enhancer binding factor 2 family of transcription factors are important in regulating the muscle-specific expression of cytosolic muscle-type CK (MCK) and mitochondrial CKs. As reported in some related studies, TNF-alpha mediated degradation of MyoD and myogenin mRNA may lead to severe muscle wasting and cachexia, which is characterized by a low transcript level of MCK and myosin heavy chain proteins. In our previous study, we reported on a complete loss of total CK activity and expression when sarcoma was induced in mouse skeletal muscle (Patra et al. FEBS J. 275 (2008) 3236-3247). This study aimed at investigating the transcriptional cascade of CK down-regulation in carcinogen-induced sarcoma in mouse muscle. Both CK deficiency and enhanced nitric oxide synthase (NOS) were known to augment mitochondrial biogenesis, so we also explored the activation of the transcriptional cascade of mitochondrial biogenesis in this cancer. We observed the activation of the TNF-alpha-mediated nitric oxide production pathway with NFkappaB activation and concomitant degradation of MyoD and myogenin mRNA. Exploration of mitochondrial biogenesis revealed high cytochrome c oxidase activity and mitochondrial DNA content in sarcoma. The PGC-related co-activator seems to have a major role in regulating mitochondrial biogenesis by upregulating nuclear respiratory factors and mitochondrial transcription factor A. From the above findings, it can be concluded that severe muscle degeneration leads to CK down-regulation in sarcoma, and that the stimulation of mitochondrial biogenesis indicated a scenario representing both CK deficiency and NOS overexpression on the one hand, and altered bioenergetic profiling on the other.
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PMID:The transcriptional cascade associated with creatine kinase down-regulation and mitochondrial biogenesis in mice sarcoma. 1934 76

The growing interest in skeletal muscle regeneration is associated with the opening of new therapeutic strategies for muscle injury after trauma, as well as several muscular degenerative pathologies, including dystrophies, muscular atrophy, and cachexia. Studies focused on the ability of extracellular factors to promote myogenesis are therefore highly promising. We now report that an adipocyte-derived factor, globular adiponectin (gAd), is able to induce muscle gene expression and cell differentiation. gAd, besides its well-known ability to regulate several metabolic functions in muscle, including glucose uptake and consumption and fatty acid catabolism, is able to block cell cycle entry of myoblasts, to induce the expression of specific skeletal muscle markers such as myosin heavy chain or caveolin-3, as well as to provoke cell fusion into multinucleated syncytia and, finally, muscle fibre formation. gAd exerts its pro-differentiative activity through redox-dependent activation of p38, Akt and 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase pathways. Interestingly, differentiating myoblasts are autocrine for adiponectin, and the mimicking of pro-inflammatory settings or exposure to oxidative stress strongly increases the production of the hormone from differentiating cells. These data suggest a novel function of adiponectin, directly coordinating the myogenic differentiation program and serving an autocrine function during skeletal myogenesis.
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PMID:Globular adiponectin induces differentiation and fusion of skeletal muscle cells. 1935 52

Muscle atrophy remains a significant concern in multiple inflammatory conditions, including injury, sepsis, cachexia, and HIV-associated wasting. Herein, we show that inflammatory stressors, including TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, or lipopolysaccharide, potently induced the novel expression of the RNA editor ADAR1, an observation not previously described in muscle cells. We also observed that cytokine stimulation suppressed muscle-associated microRNAs, an observation also not previously demonstrated. To map potential effects of ADAR1 induction in the muscle program, we conducted knockdown and overexpression studies in the mouse C2C12 muscle precursor cell (MPC) line and in primary human MPCs. We show that knockdown of stress-induced ADAR1 increased inflammation-mediated declines in the muscle differentiation markers Myogenin and myosin heavy chain, and knockdown reduced levels of active phosphorylated Akt (phospho-Akt), but had no effect on microRNA transcript levels, suggesting a role for ADAR1 in buffering inflammatory stress effects on myogenic transcription and protein synthesis pathways. In addition, overexpression of recombinant ADAR1 suppressed active phosphorylated double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-dependent protein kinase (phospho-PKR), consistent with a role for ADAR1 in limiting inflammation-driven catabolic atrophy pathways. Collectively, these data identify a novel regulatory role for ADAR1 activation under inflammatory stress to both promote muscle protein synthesis pathways and limit atrophy pathways.
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PMID:The RNA editor gene ADAR1 is induced in myoblasts by inflammatory ligands and buffers stress response. 2059 Jun 75


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