Ubiquitin conjugation by the N-end rule pathway and mRNAs for its components increase in muscles of diabetic rats

Stewart H. Lecker(Harvard University Press), Vered Solomon(Harvard University Press), S. Russ Price(Emory University), Yong Tae Kwon(California Institute of Technology), William E. Mitch(Emory University), Alfred L. Goldberg(Harvard University)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
November 15, 1999
Cited by 180Open Access
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Abstract

Insulin deficiency (e.g., in acute diabetes or fasting) is associated with enhanced protein breakdown in skeletal muscle leading to muscle wasting. Because recent studies have suggested that this increased proteolysis is due to activation of the ubiquitin-proteasome (Ub-proteasome) pathway, we investigated whether diabetes is associated with an increased rate of Ub conjugation to muscle protein. Muscle extracts from streptozotocin-induced insulin-deficient rats contained greater amounts of Ub-conjugated proteins than extracts from control animals and also 40-50% greater rates of conjugation of 125 I-Ub to endogenous muscle proteins. This enhanced Ub-conjugation occurred mainly through the N-end rule pathway that involves E2 14k and E3. A specific substrate of this pathway, -lactalbumin, was ubiquitinated faster in the diabetic extracts, and a dominant negative form of E2 14k inhibited this increase in ubiquitination rates. Both E2 14k and E3 were shown to be rate-limiting for Ub conjugation because adding small amounts of either to extracts stimulated Ub conjugation. Furthermore, mRNA for E2 14k and E3 (but not E1) were elevated 2-fold in muscles from diabetic rats, although no significant increase in E2 14k and E3 content could be detected by immunoblot or activity assays. The simplest interpretation of these results is that small increases in both E2 14k and E3 in muscles of insulin-deficient animals together accelerate Ub conjugation and protein degradation by the N-end rule pathway, the same pathway activated in cancer cachexia, sepsis, and hyperthyroidism.


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