A mini review: Proteomics approaches to understand disused vs. exercised human skeletal muscle.


Journal article


Yoshitake Cho, R. Ross
Physiological Genomics, 2018

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APA   Click to copy
Cho, Y., & Ross, R. (2018). A mini review: Proteomics approaches to understand disused vs. exercised human skeletal muscle. Physiological Genomics.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Cho, Yoshitake, and R. Ross. “A Mini Review: Proteomics Approaches to Understand Disused vs. Exercised Human Skeletal Muscle.” Physiological Genomics (2018).


MLA   Click to copy
Cho, Yoshitake, and R. Ross. “A Mini Review: Proteomics Approaches to Understand Disused vs. Exercised Human Skeletal Muscle.” Physiological Genomics, 2018.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{yoshitake2018a,
  title = {A mini review: Proteomics approaches to understand disused vs. exercised human skeletal muscle.},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {Physiological Genomics},
  author = {Cho, Yoshitake and Ross, R.}
}

Abstract

Immobilization, bed rest, or denervation leads to muscle disuse and subsequent skeletal muscle atrophy. Muscle atrophy can also occur as a component of various chronic diseases such as cancer, AIDS, sepsis, diabetes, and chronic heart failure or as a direct result of genetic muscle disorders. In addition to this atrophic loss of muscle mass, metabolic deregulation of muscle also occurs. In contrast, physical exercise plays a beneficial role in counteracting disuse-induced atrophy by increasing muscle mass and strength. Along with this, exercise can also reduce mitochondrial dysfunction and metabolic deregulation. Still, while exercise causes valuable metabolic and functional adaptations in skeletal muscle, the mechanisms and effectors that lead to these changes such as increased mitochondria content or enhanced protein synthesis are not fully understood. Therefore, mechanistic insights may ultimately provide novel ways to treat disuse induced atrophy and metabolic deregulation. Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics offers enormous promise for investigating the molecular mechanisms underlying disuse and exercise-induced changes in skeletal muscle. This review will focus on initial findings uncovered by using proteomics approaches with human skeletal muscle specimens and discuss their potential for the future study.