Role of the calpain system in muscle growth

1992 
Abstract Muscle protein degradation has an important role in rate of muscle growth. It has been difficult to develop procedures for measuring rate of muscle protein degradation in living animals, and most studies have used in vitro systems and muscle strips to determine rate of protein degradation. The relationship between results obtained by using muscle strips and rate of muscle protein turnover in living animals is unclear because these strips are in negative nitrogen balance and often develop hypoxic cores. Also, rate of protein degradation is usually estimated by release of labeled amino acids, which reflects an average rate of degradation of all cellular proteins and does not distinguish between rates of degradation of different groups of proteins such as the sarcoplasmic and the myofibrillar proteins in muscle. A number of studies have suggested that the calpain system initiates turnover of myofibrillar proteins, which are the major group of proteins in striated muscle, by making specific cleavages that release thick and thin filaments from the surface of the myofibrill and large polypeptide fragments from some of the other myofibrillar proteins. The calpains do not degrade myofibrillar proteins to small peptides or to amino acids, and they cause no bulk degradation of sarcoplasmic proteins. Hence, the calpains are not directly responsible for release of amino acids during muscle protein turnover. Activity of the calpains in living cells is regulated by calpastatin and Ca 2+ , but the nature of this regulation is still unclear.
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