Fischman A J, Yu Y M, Livni E, Babich J W, Young V R, Alpert N M, Tompkins R G
Division of Nuclear Medicine of the Department of Radiology, Boston, MA, 02114, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998 Oct 27;95(22):12793-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.95.22.12793.
Existing methods for assessing protein synthetic rates (PSRs) in human skeletal muscle are invasive and do not readily provide information about individual muscle groups. Recent studies in canine skeletal muscle yielded PSRs similar to results of simultaneous stable isotope measurements using L-[1-13C, methyl-2H3]methionine, suggesting that positron-emission tomography (PET) with L-[methyl-11C]methionine could be used along with blood sampling and a kinetic model to provide a less invasive, regional assessment of PSR. We have extended and refined this method in an investigation with healthy volunteers studied in the postabsorptive state. They received approximately 25 mCi of L-[methyl-11C]methionine with serial PET imaging of the thighs and arterial blood sampling for a period of 90 min. Tissue and metabolite-corrected arterial blood time activity curves were fitted to a three-compartment model. PSR (nmol methionine.min-1.g muscle tissue-1) was calculated from the fitted parameter values and the plasma methionine concentrations, assuming equal rates of protein synthesis and degradation. Pooled mean PSR for the anterior and posterior sites was 0.50 +/- 0.040. When converted to a fractional synthesis rate for mixed proteins in muscle, assuming a protein-bound methionine content of muscle tissue, the value of 0.125 +/- 0.01%.h-1 compares well with estimates from direct tracer incorporation studies, which generally range from approximately 0.05 to 0.09%.h-1. We conclude that PET can be used to estimate skeletal muscle PSR in healthy human subjects and that it holds promise for future in vivo, noninvasive studies of the influences of physiological factors, pharmacological manipulations, and disease states on this important component of muscle protein turnover and balance.
现有的评估人体骨骼肌蛋白质合成率(PSR)的方法具有侵入性,且无法轻易提供有关各个肌肉群的信息。最近在犬类骨骼肌中的研究得出的PSR与使用L-[1-13C,甲基-2H3]蛋氨酸进行同步稳定同位素测量的结果相似,这表明L-[甲基-11C]蛋氨酸正电子发射断层扫描(PET)可与血液采样及动力学模型一起用于对PSR进行侵入性较小的区域评估。我们在一项针对处于空腹状态的健康志愿者的研究中扩展并完善了该方法。他们接受了约25毫居里的L-[甲基-11C]蛋氨酸,并对大腿进行了连续90分钟的PET成像及动脉血采样。将组织和代谢物校正后的动脉血时间-活性曲线拟合到三室模型。假设蛋白质合成和降解速率相等,根据拟合参数值和血浆蛋氨酸浓度计算PSR(纳摩尔蛋氨酸·分钟-1·克肌肉组织-1)。前后部位的合并平均PSR为0.50±0.040。假设肌肉组织中蛋氨酸与蛋白质结合的含量,将其转换为肌肉中混合蛋白质的分数合成率时,0.125±0.01%·小时-1的值与直接示踪剂掺入研究的估计值相当,后者通常在约0.05%至0.09%·小时-1的范围内。我们得出结论,PET可用于估计健康人体受试者的骨骼肌PSR,并且它有望用于未来对生理因素、药物操作和疾病状态对肌肉蛋白质周转和平衡这一重要组成部分的影响进行的体内非侵入性研究。