MetaTOC stay on top of your field, easily

The application of stable‐isotope tracers to study human musculoskeletal protein turnover: a tale of bag filling and bag enlargement

,

The Journal of Physiology

Published online on

Abstract

--- - |2+ Abstract The nutritional regulation of protein and amino acid balance in human skeletal muscle carried out by the authors with Mike Rennie is reviewed in the context of a simple physiological model for the regulation of the maintenance and growth of skeletal muscle, the “Bag Theory”. Beginning in London in the late 1970s the work has involved the use of stable isotopes to probe muscle protein synthesis and breakdown with two basic experimental models, primed‐dose continuous tracer infusions combined with muscle biopsies and arterio‐venous (A‐V) studies across a limb, most often the leg, allowing both protein synthesis and breakdown as well as net balance to be measured. In this way, over a 30 year period, the way in which amino acids and insulin mediate the anabolic effect of a meal has been elaborated in great detail confirming the original concepts of bag filling within the muscle endomysial “bag”, which is limited by the “bag” size unless bag enlargement occurs requiring new collagen synthesis. Finally we briefly review some new developments involving 2H2O labelling of muscle proteins. - The Journal of Physiology, EarlyView.