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J Appl Physiol (September 27, 2007). doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00670.2007
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Submitted on June 23, 2007
Accepted on September 20, 2007

Collagen, cross-linking and advanced glycation endproducts in aging human skeletal muscle

Jacob Matthew Haus1, John A. Carrithers1, Scott W. Trappe1, and Todd A. Trappe1*

1 Human Performance Laboratory, Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana, United States

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ttrappe{at}bsu.edu.

We examined intramuscular endomysial collagen, cross-linking and advanced glycation endproducts, as well as the general and contractile protein concentration of 20 young (25±3y) and 22 old (78±6y, range: 70-93y) sedentary men and women to better understand the underlying basis of changes in skeletal muscle mass and function that occur with aging. The old individuals had an impaired ability (increased time) (p<0.05) to climb stairs (80%), rise from a chair (56%), and walk (44%), as well as lower (p<0.05) quadriceps muscle volume (-29%), muscle strength (-35%), muscle power (-48%), and strength (-17%) and power (-33%) normalized to muscle size. Vastus lateralis muscle biopsies revealed that intramuscular endomysial collagen (Young: 9.6±1.1, Old: 10.2±1.2 µg·mg muscle wet wt-1) and collagen cross-linking (hydroxylysylpyridinoline, HP) (Young: 395±65, Old: 351±45 mmol HP·mol collagen-1) were unchanged (p<0.05) with aging. The advanced glycation endproduct, pentosidine, was increased (p<0.05) by ~200% (Young: 5.2±1.3, Old: 15.9±4.5 mmol pentosidine·mol collagen-1) with aging. While myofibrillar protein concentration was lower (-5%, p<0.05), the concentration of the main contractile proteins myosin and actin were unchanged (p>0.05) with aging. These data suggest that the synthesis and degradation of proteins responsible for the generation (myosin and actin) and transfer (collagen and pyridinoline cross-links) of muscle force are tightly regulated in aging muscle. Glycation related cross-linking of intramuscular connective tissue may contribute to altered muscle force transmission and muscle function with healthy aging.







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