Posttranslational Modifications of Cardiac and Skeletal Muscle Proteins by Reactive Oxygen Species After Burn Injury in the Rat
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 229 (1) , 106-114
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-199901000-00014
Abstract
To determine the involvement of oxidative damage in muscle wasting after burn injury. Burn injury damages tissue at the site of the burn and also affects peripheral tissue. There is evidence to suggest that reactive oxygen species may be generated in increased amounts after burn, and these may contribute to wound healing and to posttranslational modifications of tissue constituents distant from the wound site. The oxidation of muscle proteins was assessed, using the dinitrophenylhydrazine assay for carbonyl content, in muscles of rats after a full-thickness skin scald burn covering 20% of the total body surface area, over a 6-week period. In this model, rats failed to incur normal body weight or muscle weight gain. Soleus, extensor digitorum longus, diaphragm, and heart ventricle proteins were oxidatively damaged after injury. The extent of tissue protein oxidation, however, differed depending on the time points studied. In general, higher levels of protein carbonyl group formation, an indicator of oxidative damage, were found to occur within 1 to 5 days after injury, and the oxidized protein content of the various tissues decreased during the later stages. Both sarcoplasmic and myofibrillar carbonyl-containing proteins accumulated in diaphragm 3 days after burn injury and were rapidly removed from the tissue during a 2-hour in vitro incubation. This coincided with increased proteolytic activity in diaphragm. These observations suggest that the loss of proteins modified by reactive oxygen species may contribute to the burn-induced protein wasting in respiratory and other muscles by a proteolytically driven mechanism.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Oxidative organ damage in a rat model of thermal injury: the effect of cyclosporin ABurns, 1997
- Sepsis stimulates nonlysosomal, energy-dependent proteolysis and increases ubiquitin mRNA levels in rat skeletal muscle.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1994
- Mechanisms of protein conservation during xylitol infusion after burn injury in rats: isotope kinetics and indirect calorimetryEuropean Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1991
- Comparative Effects of Thermal and Surgical Trauma on Rat Muscle Protein MetabolismJournal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition, 1991
- Superoxide dismutase prevents lipid peroxidation in burned patientsBurns, 1990
- Metabolic alterations in burn patients: detection of adenosine triphosphate degradation products and lipid peroxidesBurns, 1990
- The effect of aging on cutaneous lipid peroxide levels and superoxide dismutase activity in guinea pigs and patients with burnsLife Sciences, 1988
- Serum lipid peroxide levels of patients suffering from thermal injuryBurns, 1984
- Systemic response to thermal injury in rats. Accelerated protein degradation and altered glucose utilization in muscle.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1984
- Correlation of Color and Constitution. I. 2,4-DinitrophenylhydrazonesJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1953