Protein synthesis rates of muscle, tendon, ligament, cartilage, and bone tissue in vivo in humans
- 01Many connective tissues remodel at rates similar to muscle
- 02Tendon, ligament, and cartilage are metabolically active tissues
- 03Synovial tissue has a particularly high protein turnover rate
- 04Findings suggest connective tissues have good adaptive capacity
Connective tissues like tendons and ligaments are not inert; they actively remodel at rates comparable to muscle.
Skeletal muscle plasticity is reflected by a dynamic balance between protein synthesis and breakdown, with basal muscle tissue protein synthesis rates ranging between 0.02 and 0.09%/h. Though it is evident that other musculoskeletal tissues should also express some level of plasticity, data on protein synthesis rates of most of these tissues in vivo in humans is limited. Six otherwise healthy patients (62±3 y), scheduled to undergo unilateral total knee arthroplasty, were subjected to primed continuous intravenous infusions with L-[ring-13C6]-Phenylalanine throughout the surgical procedure. Tissue samples obtained during surgery included muscle, tendon, cruciate ligaments, cartilage, bone, menisci, fat, and synovium. Tissue-specific fractional protein synthesis rates (%/h) were assessed by measuring the incorporation of L-[ring-13C6]-Phenylalanine in tissue protein and were compared with muscle tissue protein synthesis rates using a paired t test. Tendon, bone, cartilage, Hoffa's fat pad, anterior and posterior cruciate ligament, and menisci tissue protein synthesis rates averaged 0.06±0.01, 0.03±0.01, 0.04±0.01, 0.11±0.03, 0.07±0.02, 0.04±0.01, and 0.04±0.01%/h, respectively, and did not significantly differ from skeletal muscle protein synthesis rates (0.04±0.01%/h; P>0.05). Synovium derived protein (0.13±0.03%/h) and intercondylar notch bone tissue protein synthesis rates (0.03±0.01%/h) were respectively higher and lower compared to skeletal muscle protein synthesis rates (P<0.05 and P<0.01, respectively). Basal protein synthesis rates in various musculoskeletal tissues are within the same range of skeletal muscle protein synthesis rates, with fractional muscle, tendon, bone, cartilage, ligament, menisci, fat, and synovium protein synthesis rates ranging between 0.02 and 0.13% per hour in vivo in humans.
- APA
- Joey S J Smeets, Astrid M H Horstman, Georges F Vles, Pieter J Emans, Joy P B Goessens, Annemie P Gijsen, Janneau M X van Kranenburg, & Luc J C van Loon (2019). Protein synthesis rates of muscle, tendon, ligament, cartilage, and bone tissue in vivo in humans. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/protein-synthesis-rates-of-muscle-tendon-ligament-cartilage-and-bone-tissue-in-vivo-in-humans/
- MLA
- Joey S J Smeets, et al. "Protein synthesis rates of muscle, tendon, ligament, cartilage, and bone tissue in vivo in humans." 2019, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/protein-synthesis-rates-of-muscle-tendon-ligament-cartilage-and-bone-tissue-in-vivo-in-humans/.
- Chicago
- Joey S J Smeets et al. 2019. "Protein synthesis rates of muscle, tendon, ligament, cartilage, and bone tissue in vivo in humans.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/protein-synthesis-rates-of-muscle-tendon-ligament-cartilage-and-bone-tissue-in-vivo-in-humans/
- B1996Selective regulation of myofiber differentiation by energy status during postnatal development
- A++2012Diet-Induced Dysbiosis of the Intestinal Microbiota and the Effects on Immunity and Disease
- A+2012Nutritional regulation of muscle protein synthesis with resistance exercise: strategies to enhance anabolism
- Ep. 00303. What is Fascia? How researchers discovered new cells and a new organ
In the first two episodes, we have established that there are different ways of looking at the body and that there are major shortcomings in our Western way of viewing both human…
- Ep. —Podcast Recommendations: One Idea Gives Birth to Another.
Människan & maskinen and Myter & mysterier Per Johansson and Eric Schüldt have together created several podcast series that explore human nature, technological development, and ex…
