Artificial gravity maintains skeletal muscle protein synthesis during 21 days of simulated microgravity
- 1 July 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Applied Physiology
- Vol. 107 (1), 34-38
- https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.91137.2008
Abstract
We sought to determine the effects of longitudinal loading (artificial gravity) on skeletal muscle protein kinetics in 15 healthy young males after 21 days of 6° head-down tilt bed rest [experimental treatment (Exp) group: n = 8, 31 ± 1 yr; control (Con) group; n = 7, 28 ± 1 yr, means ± SE]. On days 1 and 21 of bed rest, postabsorptive venous blood samples and muscle biopsies (vastus lateralis and soleus) were obtained during a 1-h pulse bolus infusion protocol (0 min, l-[ring-13C6]phenylalanine, 35 μmol/kg; 30 min, l-[ring-15N]phenylalanine, 35 μmol/kg). Outcome measures included mixed muscle fractional synthesis (FSR) and breakdown rates (FBR). The Exp group experienced 1 h of longitudinal loading (2.5G at the feet) via a short-radius centrifuge during each day of bed rest. Mixed muscle FSR in the Con group was reduced by 48.5% (day 1, 0.081 ± 0.000%/h vs. day 21, 0.042 ± 0.000%/h; P = 0.001) in vastus lateralis after 21 days of bed rest, whereas the Exp group maintained their rate of protein synthesis. A similar but nonsignificant change in FSR was noted for the soleus muscle (Exp, −7%; Con, −22%). No changes in muscle protein breakdown were observed. In conclusion, 1 h of daily exposure to artificial gravity maintained the rate of protein synthesis of the vastus lateralis and may represent an effective adjunct countermeasure to combat the loss of muscle mass and functional during extended spaceflight.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of artificial gravity during bed rest on bone metabolism in humansJournal of Applied Physiology, 2009
- Artificial gravity as a countermeasure to microgravity: a pilot study examining the effects on knee extensor and plantar flexor muscle groupsJournal of Applied Physiology, 2009
- Effects of 21 days of bed rest, with or without artificial gravity, on nutritional status of humansJournal of Applied Physiology, 2009
- Differential effects of resistance and endurance exercise in the fed state on signalling molecule phosphorylation and protein synthesis in human muscleThe Journal of Physiology, 2008
- Exogenous amino acids stimulate human muscle anabolism without interfering with the response to mixed meal ingestionAmerican Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, 2005
- Inactivity and muscle: effect of resistance training during bed rest on muscle size in the lower limbActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 2001
- Inactivity Amplifies the Catabolic Response of Skeletal Muscle to CortisolJournal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1999
- Use of stable isotopically labeled tracers for studies of metabolic kinetics: An overviewMetabolism, 1997
- The determination of low d5‐phenylalanine enrichment (0.002–0.09 atom percent excess), after conversion to phenylethylamine, in relation to protein turnover studies by gass chromatography/electron ionization mass spectrometryRapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 1992
- Percutaneous Needle Biopsy of Skeletal Muscle in Physiological and Clinical ResearchScandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation, 1975