The effects of acidosis, glutamine starvation and inhibition of the pH sensitive SNAT 2 amino acid transporter on protein metabolism in L6 muscle cells
posted on 2009-12-09, 11:50authored byKate Florella Evans
Uraemia in end-stage renal disease patients leads to wasting of lean
tissue, partly through the effects of acidosis that induce negative protein
balance. Insulin resistance in these patients is also a major cause of
muscle wasting, suggesting that low pH has a significant effect on insulin
signalling in uraemic muscle. The pH sensitive SNAT2 amino acid
transporter has been implicated in this because it is strongly inhibited by
low pH, and amino acids are a well-established stimulus for the key
protein kinase mTOR which regulates protein synthesis. The aims of
this study were to determine: (a) the effects of amino acids, (especially
L-Gln), and acidosis on insulin signalling and global protein
synthesis/proteolysis rates; (b) whether these effects are mimicked by
selective inhibition of SNAT2, and (c) whether intracellular amino acid
depletion is sufficient to account for the functional effects of SNAT2
inhibition.
In the L6 skeletal muscle cell-line, inhibition of SNAT2 with the nonmetabolisable
SLC38 substrate methylaminoisobutyrate, metabolic
acidosis (pH 7.1), or silencing of SNAT2 expression with smallinterfering
RNAs, all decreased intracellular amino acid concentrations,
mTOR activation, and global protein synthesis; and increased global
proteolysis. Acidosis and small-interfering RNA inhibition both decreased
phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase and protein kinase B activation, even
though this is not regarded as an amino acid sensitive pathway.
Extracellular amino acid depletion yielded decreases in intracellular
amino acid levels similar to those observed during SNAT2 inhibition, but
this failed to mimic the impairment of mTOR signalling observed when
SNAT2 was inhibited.
It is concluded that, in this muscle model, SNAT2 is able to regulate mTOR activation and protein synthesis rates; and that SNAT2 links acidosis, activity of the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase/PKB signalling
pathway and proteolysis, suggesting that SNAT2 is a key player in the acid-induced insulin resistance which is a prime cause of cachexia in acidotic uraemic patients.