MRC/Arthritis Research UK Centre for Musculoskeletal Ageing Research, Arthritis Research UK Centre for Sport, Exercise and Osteoarthritis, National Institute for Health Research Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre, School of Life Sciences, University of Nottingham, UK.
Institute of Sport, Exercise and Health, London, UK.
J Physiol. 2019 Mar;597(5):1259-1270. doi: 10.1113/JP275444. Epub 2018 Aug 18.
Loss of muscle mass and insulin sensitivity are common phenotypic traits of immobilisation and increased inflammatory burden. The suppression of muscle protein synthesis is the primary driver of muscle mass loss in human immobilisation, and includes blunting of post-prandial increases in muscle protein synthesis. However, the mechanistic drivers of this suppression are unresolved. Immobilisation also induces limb insulin resistance in humans, which appears to be attributable to the reduction in muscle contraction per se. Again mechanistic insight is missing such that we do not know how muscle senses its "inactivity status" or whether the proposed drivers of muscle insulin resistance are simply arising as a consequence of immobilisation. A heightened inflammatory state is associated with major and rapid changes in muscle protein turnover and mass, and dampened insulin-stimulated glucose disposal and oxidation in both rodents and humans. A limited amount of research has attempted to elucidate molecular regulators of muscle mass loss and insulin resistance during increased inflammatory burden, but rarely concurrently. Nevertheless, there is evidence that Akt (protein kinase B) signalling and FOXO transcription factors form part of a common signalling pathway in this scenario, such that molecular cross-talk between atrophy and insulin signalling during heightened inflammation is believed to be possible. To conclude, whilst muscle mass loss and insulin resistance are common end-points of immobilisation and increased inflammatory burden, a lack of understanding of the mechanisms responsible for these traits exists such that a substantial gap in understanding of the pathophysiology in humans endures.
肌肉质量下降和胰岛素敏感性增强是固定和炎症负担增加的常见表型特征。肌肉蛋白合成的抑制是人类固定导致肌肉质量下降的主要驱动因素,包括餐后肌肉蛋白合成增加的减弱。然而,这种抑制的机制驱动因素尚未解决。固定还会导致人体四肢胰岛素抵抗,这似乎归因于肌肉收缩本身的减少。同样,缺乏机制上的认识,我们不知道肌肉如何感知其“不活动状态”,或者肌肉胰岛素抵抗的拟议驱动因素是否仅仅是固定的结果。炎症状态的升高与肌肉蛋白周转率和质量的重大和快速变化以及啮齿动物和人类中胰岛素刺激的葡萄糖摄取和氧化的减弱有关。很少有研究试图阐明在炎症加重期间肌肉质量下降和胰岛素抵抗的分子调节剂,但很少同时进行。然而,有证据表明 Akt(蛋白激酶 B)信号和 FOXO 转录因子在这种情况下形成共同信号通路的一部分,因此,在炎症加剧期间,萎缩和胰岛素信号之间的分子串扰被认为是可能的。总之,虽然肌肉质量下降和胰岛素抵抗是固定和炎症负担增加的常见终点,但对于导致这些特征的机制缺乏了解,导致对人类病理生理学的理解存在很大差距。