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Jean-Francois HOCQUETTE

hocquet@clermont.inra.fr

Journal articles

2007
 
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Isabelle Cassar-Malek, Florent Passelaigue, Carine Bernard, Jean Léger, Jean-François Hocquette (2007)  Target genes of myostatin loss-of-function in muscles of late bovine fetuses.   BMC Genomics 8: 03  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Myostatin, a muscle-specific member of the Transforming Growth Factor beta family, negatively regulates muscle development. Double-muscled (DM) cattle have a loss-of-function mutation in their myostatin gene responsible for the hypermuscular phenotype. Thus, these animals are a good model for understanding the mechanisms underpinning muscular hypertrophy. In order to identify individual genes or networks that may be myostatin targets, we looked for genes that were differentially expressed between DM and normal (NM) animals (n = 3 per group) in the semitendinosus muscle (hypertrophied in DM animals) at 260 days of fetal development (when the biochemical differentiation of muscle is intensive). A heterologous microarray (human and murine oligonucleotide sequences) of around 6,000 genes expressed in muscle was used. RESULTS: Many genes were found to be differentially expressed according to genetic type (some with a more than 5-fold change), and according to the presence of one or two functional myostatin allele(s). They belonged to various functional categories. The genes down-regulated in DM fetuses were mainly those encoding extracellular matrix proteins, slow contractile proteins and ribosomal proteins. The genes up-regulated in DM fetuses were mainly involved in the regulation of transcription, cell cycle/apoptosis, translation or DNA metabolism. These data highlight features indicating that DM muscle is shifted towards a more glycolytic metabolism, and has an altered extracellular matrix composition (e.g. down-regulation of COL1A1 and COL1A2, and up-regulation of COL4A2) and decreased adipocyte differentiation (down-regulation of C1QTNF3). The altered gene expression in the three major muscle compartments (fibers, connective tissue and intramuscular adipose tissue) is consistent with the well-known characteristics of DM cattle. In addition, novel potential targets of the myostatin gene were identified (MB, PLN, troponins, ZFHX1B). CONCLUSION: Thus, the myostatin loss-of-function mutation affected several physiological processes involved in the development and determination of the functional characteristics of muscle tissue.
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Y Heyman, P Chavatte-Palmer, V Berthelot, G Fromentin, J F Hocquette, L Martignat, J P Renard (2007)  Assessing the quality of products from cloned cattle: an integrative approach.   Theriogenology 67: 1. 134-141 Jan  
Abstract: Scientific expertise was developed during a 3-year study to evaluate a large number of bovine female clones (n=37; from 4 to 36 months of age) and their products through a multidisciplinary approach and compare them to non-cloned breed, age and sex-matched contemporary control animals (n=38) maintained under the same conditions at the same experimental farm of INRA. In clone and control groups, most parameters measured for health and development of the animals as well as evaluation of milk and meat products were within the normal range for the breed. The strict comparison between cloned animals and controls allowed us to detect slight significant differences between the two groups. Cloned heifers reached puberty significantly later (+62 days) and at higher body weight (+56kg) than controls. There were slight differences in antigen-specific induced proliferation of lymphocytes after vaccination with ovalbumin before 10 months of age, but responses were normal responses in older animals. There were differences in the fatty acid (FA) composition of milk and muscle arising from two families of clones, suggesting a possible deviation in lipid metabolism as assessed by higher Delta-9 desaturase activity indices in both milk and muscle from clones compared to controls. Nutritional evaluation of milk and meat using the rat model did not reveal any difference between products derived from clones versus controls.
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I Cassar-Malek, B Picard, S Kahl, J F Hocquette (2007)  Relationships between thyroid status, tissue oxidative metabolism, and muscle differentiation in bovine fetuses.   Domest Anim Endocrinol 33: 1. 91-106 Jul  
Abstract: The temporal relationships between thyroid status and differentiation of liver, heart and different skeletal muscles were examined in 42 bovine fetuses from day 110 to day 260 of development using principal component analysis of the data. Plasma concentrations of reverse-triiodothyronine (rT(3)) and thyroxine (T(4)) increased during development from day 110 to day 210 or 260, respectively, whereas concentration of triiodothyronine (T(3)) and hepatic type-1 5'-deiodinase activity (5'D1) increased from day 180 onwards. On day 260, high T(4) and rT(3) and low T(3) concentrations were observed together with a mature 5'D1 activity. Cytochrome-c oxidase (COX) activity expressed per mg protein increased at day 180 in masseter and near birth in masseter, rectus abdominis and cutaneus trunci muscles (P<0.05). Significant changes in citrate synthase (CS) activity per mg protein were observed between day 110 and day 180 in the liver and between day 210 and day 260 in the liver, the heart and the longissimus thoracis muscle (P<0.05). Muscle contractile differentiation was shown by the disappearance of the fetal myosin heavy chain from day 180 onwards. A positive correlation (r>0.47, P<0.01) was shown between thyroid status parameters (5'D1, concentrations of T(4) and T(3)) and COX activity in muscles known to be oxidative after birth (masseter, rectus abdominis) but not in liver and heart, nor in muscles known to be glycolytic after birth (cutaneus trunci, longissimus thoracis). A similar correlation was found between thyroid parameters and CS activity in liver and masseter. Results indicate that elevation of plasma T(3) concentrations in the last gestational trimester could be involved in the differentiation of oxidative skeletal muscles.
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M Bonnet, Y Faulconnier, C Leroux, C Jurie, I Cassar-Malek, D Bauchart, P Boulesteix, D Pethick, J F Hocquette, Y Chilliard (2007)  Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and leptin are related to marbling differences among Limousin and Angus or Japanese Black x Angus steers.   J Anim Sci 85: 11. 2882-2894 Nov  
Abstract: This work investigated the metabolic basis for the variability of carcass and i.m. adiposity in cattle. Our hypothesis was that the comparison of extreme breeds for adiposity might allow for the identification of some metabolic pathways determinant for carcass and i.m. adiposity. Thus, 23- to 28-mo-old steers of 3 breeds, 2 with high [Angus or Japanese Black x Angus (J. Black cross)] and 1 with low (Limousin) i.m. and carcass adiposity, were used to measure activities or mRNA levels, or both, of enzymes involved in de novo lipogenesis [acetyl-coA carboxylase, fatty acid synthase (FAS), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), malic enzyme], circulating triacylglycerol (TAG) uptake (lipoprotein lipase), and fatty acid esterification (glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase), as well as the mRNA level of leptin, an adiposity-related factor. In a first study, enzyme activities were assayed in the s.c. adipose tissue (AT), the oxidative rectus abdominis, and the glycolytic semitendinosus muscles from steers finished for 6 mo. Compared with Angus or J. Black cross, Limousin steers had a 27% less (P = 0.003) rib fat thickness, and 23 and 29% less (P < or = 0.02) FAS and G6PDH activities in s.c. AT. In rectus abdominis and semitendinosus, the 75% less (P < 0.001) TAG content was concomitant with 50% less (P < 0.001) G6PDH activity. In a second study, enzyme activities plus mRNA levels were assayed in an oxido-glycolytic muscle, the longissimus thoracis (LT), in the i.m. AT dissected from LT, and in s.c. AT from the same Limousin steers and from Angus steers finished for 10 mo. Compared with Angus, the 50% less (P < 0.001) rib fat thickness in Limousin contrasted with the 1.1- to 5.8-fold greater (P < or = 0.02) mRNA levels or activities, or both, of acetyl-coA carboxylase, G6PDH, lipoprotein lipase, and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase in s.c. AT. Conversely, the 90% less (P < 0.001) TAG content in Limousin LT was concomitant to the 79 and 83% less (P < or = 0.002) G6PDH activity and leptin mRNA level. Such differences could arise from a greater number of adipocytes in LT from Angus steers because no difference was found between Limousin and Angus for G6PDH activity and leptin mRNA in i.m. AT. We conclude that FAS and G6PDH in s.c. AT could be involved in differences in carcass adiposity, but this relationship disappeared when the fatness increased strongly. Leptin and G6PDH are related to the expression of marbling whatever the body condition and thus could be relevant indicators of marbling in beef cattle.
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Joost J G C van den Borne, Jean-François Hocquette, Martin W A Verstegen, Walter J J Gerrits (2007)  Whole body and muscle energy metabolism in preruminant calves: effects of nutrient synchrony and physical activity.   Br J Nutr 97: 4. 667-675 Apr  
Abstract: The effects of asynchronous availability of amino acids and glucose on muscle composition and enzyme activities in skeletal muscle were studied in preruminant calves. It was hypothesized that decreased oxidative enzyme activities in muscle would explain a decreased whole body heat production with decreasing nutrient synchrony. Preruminant calves were assigned to one of six degrees of nutrient synchrony, step-wise separating the intake of protein and lactose over the two daily meals. Calves at the most synchronous treatment received two identical meals daily. At the most asynchronous treatment, 85% of the daily protein and 20% of the daily lactose supply were fed in one meal and the remainder in the other meal. Daily intakes of all dietary ingredients were identical for all treatments. Oxidative enzyme activities and fat content increased with decreasing nutrient synchrony in M. Rectus Abdominis (RA), but not in M. Semitendinosus. Cytochrome-c-oxidase activity was positively correlated with fat content in RA (r 0.49; P < 0.01). Oxidative enzyme activities in both muscles were not correlated with average daily heat production, but citrate synthase activity in RA was positively correlated (P < 0.01) with the circadian amplitude (r 0.53) and maximum (r 0.61) of heat production associated with physical activity. In conclusion, this study indicates that muscle energy stores are regulated by nutrient synchrony. The lack of correlation between muscle oxidative enzyme activities and average daily heat production was in contrast with findings in human subjects. Therefore, oxidative enzyme activity in muscle should not be used as an indicator for whole body heat production in growing calves.
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Bruno Meunier, Emilie Dumas, Isabelle Piec, Daniel Béchet, Michel Hébraud, Jean-François Hocquette (2007)  Assessment of hierarchical clustering methodologies for proteomic data mining.   J Proteome Res 6: 1. 358-366 Jan  
Abstract: Hierarchical clustering methodology is a powerful data mining approach for a first exploration of proteomic data. It enables samples or proteins to be grouped blindly according to their expression profiles. Nevertheless, the clustering results depend on parameters such as data preprocessing, between-profile similarity measurement, and the dendrogram construction procedure. We assessed several clustering strategies by calculating the F-measure, a widely used quality metric. The combination, on logged matrix, of Pearson correlation and Ward's methods for data aggregation is among the best clustering strategies, at least with the data sets we studied. This study was carried out using PermutMatrix, a freely available software derived from transcriptomics.
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Carine Bernard, Isabelle Cassar-Malek, Martine Le Cunff, Hervé Dubroeucq, Gilles Renand, Jean-François Hocquette (2007)  New indicators of beef sensory quality revealed by expression of specific genes.   J Agric Food Chem 55: 13. 5229-5237 Jun  
Abstract: To identify new molecular markers of beef sensory quality, the transcriptomes of Longissimus thoracis muscle from 25 Charolais bull calves were analyzed using microarrays and compared between high and low meat quality groups; 215 genes were differentially expressed according to tenderness, juiciness, and/or flavor. Among these, 23 were up-regulated in the tenderest, juiciest, and tastiest meats, and 18 were highly correlated with both flavor and juiciness (e.g., PRKAG1), explaining up to 60% of their variability. Nine were down-regulated in the same meats, but only DNAJA1 [the results relating to DNAJA1 and its relationship with tenderness have been patented (Genomic marker for meat tenderness; Patent EP06300943.5, September 12, 2006)], which encodes a heat shock protein, showed a strong negative correlation with tenderness that alone explained 63% of its variability. This protein, known for its anti-apoptotic role, could be involved in meat aging. Thus, DNAJA1 could constitute a new marker of beef sensory quality.
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Julie Demars, Juliette Riquet, Marie-Pierre Sanchez, Yvon Billon, Jean-François Hocquette, Bénédicte Lebret, Nathalie Iannuccelli, Jean-Pierre Bidanel, Denis Milan, Florence Gondret (2007)  Metabolic and histochemical characteristics of fat and muscle tissues in homozygous or heterozygous pigs for the body composition QTL located on chromosome 7.   Physiol Genomics 30: 3. 232-241 Aug  
Abstract: Quantitative trait loci (QTL) influencing many traits including backfat thickness and carcass composition have been detected on porcine chromosome 7 (SSC7) in an F2 cross between Large White (LW) and Meishan (MS) pigs. However, the genes and controlled pathways underlying the QTL effects on body phenotype remain unknown. This study aimed at investigating the tissue characteristics at metabolic and cellular levels in pigs that were either homozygous or heterozygous for a body composition SSC7 QTL. A backcross pig (BC3) was first progeny tested to confirm its heterozygoty for the SSC7 QTL; results on all offspring (n = 80) confirmed the QTL effects on body fatness. This boar was then mated with three sows known to be heterozygous for this QTL. In the subset of pigs per genotype, we found that heterozygous LW(QTL7)/MS(QTL7) pigs had smaller adipocytes in backfat, together with a lower basal rate of glucose incorporation into lipids and lower activities of selected lipogenic enzymes in backfat isolated cells, compared with homozygous LW(QTL7)/LW(QTL7) pigs. A higher number of adipocytes was also estimated in backfat of LW(QTL7)/MS(QTL7) animals compared with LW(QTL7)/LW(QTL7) pigs. The SSC7 QTL did not influence oxidative and glycolytic metabolisms of longissimus and trapezius muscles, as estimated by the activities of specific energy metabolism enzymes, or the myofiber type properties. Altogether, this study provides new evidence for an altered adipocyte cellularity in backfat of pigs carrying at least one MS allele for the SSC7 QTL. Some candidate genes known for their functions on adipocyte growth and differentiation are suggested.
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Pascal Degrace, Laurent Demizieux, Zhen-Yu Du, Joseph Gresti, Laurent Caverot, Louiza Djaouti, Tony Jourdan, Bastien Moindrot, Jean-Claude Guilland, Jean-François Hocquette, Pierre Clouet (2007)  Regulation of lipid flux between liver and adipose tissue during transient hepatic steatosis in carnitine-depleted rats.   J Biol Chem 282: 29. 20816-20826 Jul  
Abstract: Rats with carnitine deficiency due to trimethylhydrazinium propionate (mildronate) administered at 80 mg/100 g body weight per day for 10 days developed liver steatosis only upon fasting. This study aimed to determine whether the transient steatosis resulted from triglyceride accumulation due to the amount of fatty acids preserved through impaired fatty acid oxidation and/or from up-regulation of lipid exchange between liver and adipose tissue. In liver, mildronate decreased the carnitine content by approximately 13-fold and, in fasted rats, lowered the palmitate oxidation rate by 50% in the perfused organ, increased 9-fold the triglyceride content, and doubled the hepatic very low density lipoprotein secretion rate. Concomitantly, triglyceridemia was 13-fold greater than in controls. Hepatic carnitine palmitoyltransferase I activity and palmitate oxidation capacities measured in vitro were increased after treatment. Gene expression of hepatic proteins involved in fatty acid oxidation, triglyceride formation, and lipid uptake were all increased and were associated with increased hepatic free fatty acid content in treated rats. In periepididymal adipose tissue, mildronate markedly increased lipoprotein lipase and hormone-sensitive lipase activities in fed and fasted rats, respectively. On refeeding, carnitine-depleted rats exhibited a rapid decrease in blood triglycerides and free fatty acids, then after approximately 2 h, a marked drop of liver triglycerides and a progressive decrease in liver free fatty acids. Data show that up-regulation of liver activities, peripheral lipolysis, and lipoprotein lipase activity were likely essential factors for excess fat deposit and release alternately occurring in liver and adipose tissue of carnitine-depleted rats during the fed/fasted transition.
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Anissa Fergani, Hugues Oudart, Jose-Luis Gonzalez De Aguilar, Bastien Fricker, Frédérique René, Jean-François Hocquette, Vincent Meininger, Luc Dupuis, Jean-Philippe Loeffler (2007)  Increased peripheral lipid clearance in an animal model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.   J Lipid Res 48: 7. 1571-1580 Jul  
Abstract: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is the most common adult motor neuron disease, causing motor neuron degeneration, muscle atrophy, paralysis, and death. Despite this degenerative process, a stable hypermetabolic state has been observed in a large subset of patients. Mice expressing a mutant form of Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (mSOD1 mice) constitute an animal model of ALS that, like patients, exhibits unexpectedly increased energy expenditure. Counterbalancing for this increase with a high-fat diet extends lifespan and prevents motor neuron loss. Here, we investigated whether lipid metabolism is defective in this animal model. Hepatic lipid metabolism was roughly normal, whereas gastrointestinal absorption of lipids as well as peripheral clearance of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins were markedly increased, leading to decreased postprandial lipidemia. This defect was corrected by the high-fat regimen that typically induces neuroprotection in these animals. Together, our findings show that energy metabolism in mSOD1 mice shifts toward an increase in the peripheral use of lipids. This metabolic shift probably accounts for the protective effect of dietary lipids in this model.
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C Jurie, I Cassar-Malek, M Bonnet, C Leroux, D Bauchart, P Boulesteix, D W Pethick, J F Hocquette (2007)  Adipocyte fatty acid-binding protein and mitochondrial enzyme activities in muscles as relevant indicators of marbling in cattle.   J Anim Sci 85: 10. 2660-2669 Oct  
Abstract: Marbling is an important criterion for beef quality grading in many countries. The purpose of the current study was to utilize the natural genetic variation to identify major metabolic indicators of marbling in cattle differing in genotypes. Rectus abdominis (RA, oxidative), semitendinosus (glycolytic), and longissimus thoracis (LT, oxido-glycolytic) muscles were taken from steers of different genotypes that expressed high [Angus, n = 16; and crossbred (Angus x Japanese Black), n = 10] or low (Limousin, n = 12) levels of marbling in their meat. Muscles from Angus and crossbred steers were characterized, as expected, by a greater triacylglycerol (TAG) content (P < 0.001) and also by greater protein contents of fatty acid-binding protein specific for heart and muscles (H-FABP; P < 0.001 for RA and P < 0.05 for LT muscle) or for adipocytes (A-FABP; P < 0.001 for RA and LT muscles). Moreover, oxidative enzyme activities (beta-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, cytochrome-c oxidase) were greater (P < 0.01 to 0.001) in the 3 muscles studied, whereas glycolytic enzyme activities (phosphofructokinase and lactate dehydrogenase) were lower (P < 0.001) in RA muscle in Angus and crossbred steers compared with Limousin steers. Significant correlations were observed between TAG content and H- and A-FABP protein contents, and oxidative (r > or = +0.55, P < 0.001) or glycolytic enzyme activities (r > or = -0.47, P < 0.001), when the 3 genotypes and muscles studied were considered as a whole. In addition, A-FABP protein content and some oxidative enzyme activities were significantly correlated with TAG content independently of the genotype and muscle effects. In conclusion, A-FABP protein content, as well as oxidative enzyme activities, may be used as indicators of the ability of steers from extreme genotypes to deposit intramuscular fat.
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2006
 
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Patrycja Pawlikowska, Barbara Gajkowska, Jean-François Hocquette, Arkadiusz Orzechowski (2006)  Not only insulin stimulates mitochondriogenesis in muscle cells, but mitochondria are also essential for insulin-mediated myogenesis.   Cell Prolif 39: 2. 127-145 Apr  
Abstract: Viability and myogenesis from C2C12 muscle cells and L6 rat myoblasts were dose-dependently stimulated by insulin. The metabolic inhibitors of phosphatidyl-inositol-3-kinase (PI-3K, LY294002) and of MAPKK/ERK kinase (MEK, PD98059) differently affected insulin-stimulated myogenesis of the cells. After LY294002 and PD98059 treatment, viability deteriorated and apparently an additive effect of both metabolic inhibitors was observed, irrespective of the method of measurement (neutral red or MTT assay). These inhibitors were antagonistic in myogenesis. Our results confirm that insulin regulates cell viability by at least two distinct pathways, namely by PI-3K- and MEK-dependent signalling cascades. Both pathways are agonistic in cell viability, whereas PI-3K rather than MEK supports insulin-mediated myogenicity. Accordingly, inhibition of insulin action by LY294002, but not PD98059, was accompanied with a reduced level of Ser473-phosphorylated Akt with additional loss of myogenin protein. Besides, repression of insulin signalling by either PI-3K or MEK inhibitor diminished expression of selected subunits of the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation enzymes (OXPHOS). In turn, insulin raised and accelerated protein expression of subunits I and IV of mitochondrial cytochrome-c oxidase (COX). In addition, the level of myogenin, the molecular marker of terminal and general muscle differentiation indices decreased if selected OXPHOS enzymes were individually blocked by rotenone, myxothiazol or oligomycin. Summing up, our results pointed to mitochondria as an essential organelle for insulin-dependent myogenesis. Insulin positively affects mitochondrial function by induction of OXPHOS enzymes, which provide energy indispensable for the anabolic effect of insulin.
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Jean-François Hocquette, Helga Sauerwein, Yumi Higashiyama, Brigitte Picard, Hiroyuki Abe (2006)  Prenatal developmental changes in glucose transporters, intermediary metabolism and hormonal receptors related to the IGF/insulin-glucose axis in the heart and adipose tissue of bovines.   Reprod Nutr Dev 46: 3. 257-272 May/Jun  
Abstract: Glucose transporter ontogenesis is likely to play a key role in glucose uptake by foetal tissues in order to satisfy their energy requirements. We thus investigated developmental changes in the bovine heart and perirenal adipose tissue in two glucose transporter isoforms, namely GLUT1 and GLUT4, the latter being responsible for the regulation of glucose uptake by insulin. Other key players of the glucose/insulin axis were also assessed. Plasma glucose concentration in the foetus was lower at 8 and 8.5 months of age than previously. In the heart, GLUT1 protein level markedly decreased between 3 and 4 months of age, whereas the number of insulin and IGF-I binding sites continually decreased, especially between 7 and 8 or 8.5 months of age. On the contrary, the GLUT4 level increased until 8 months of age and remained high until 2 weeks after birth. The activities of enzymes of glucose metabolism (namely phosphofructokinase [PFK] and lactate dehydrogenase [LDH]) increased throughout gestation and reached a plateau at 6 and 8.5 months of age for PFK and LDH, respectively. The activities of enzymes involved in fatty acid metabolism increased especially at birth. In perirenal adipose tissue, high mitochondrial activity was detected before birth which is a characteristic of brown adipose tissue. Furthermore, lipoprotein lipase activity and GLUT4 protein level markedly increased to reach a maximum at 6-7 and 8 months of age, and sharply decreased thereafter, whereas GLUT1 protein level increased between 6 and 7 months of age. In conclusion, considerable changes in the regulation of the insulin/glucose axis were observed from 6 months onwards of foetal development in both the heart and adipose tissue of cattle, which probably alters the potential of these tissues to use glucose or fat as energy sources.
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Pascal Chartrin, Marie-Dominique Bernadet, Gérard Guy, Jacques Mourot, Jean-François Hocquette, Nicole Rideau, Michel Jacques Duclos, Elisabeth Baéza (2006)  Does overfeeding enhance genotype effects on liver ability for lipogenesis and lipid secretion in ducks?   Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 145: 3. 390-396 Nov  
Abstract: We evaluated the effects of genotype (Muscovy, Pekin and their crossbreed hinny and mule ducks) and feeding levels (overfeeding between 12 and 14 weeks of age vs ad libitum feeding) on liver ability for lipogenesis and lipid secretion in ducks. Samples of liver and blood were collected at 14 weeks of age from 8 birds per group. Plasma levels of insulin was considerably increased in overfed ducks (1.9-fold), stimulating the hepatic activity of the main enzymes involved in lipogenesis from glucose (glucokinase, GK, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, G6PDH, malic enzyme, ME, acetyl CoA carboxylase, ACX), while cytochrome-c oxidase (COX) activity, indicating overall oxidation ability of energy-yielding substrates, remained unchanged. Plasma levels of triglycerides, phospholipids and total cholesterol were therefore increased (1.9, 3.7, 1.6 and 1.6-fold, respectively). Glycaemia also significantly increased (+8%). Pekin ducks exhibited higher levels of GK and G6PDH activity in the liver than Muscovy ducks, suggesting a greater ability to use glucose consistent with their lower glycaemia. Muscovy ducks had greater ACX activity, suggesting greater ability to synthesise lipids. However, plasma lipid levels were much higher in Pekin ducks than in Muscovy ducks, suggesting a greater ability to export lipids from the liver. Values for the different criteria measured in this study were intermediate or similar in hinny and mule ducks to those of parental species. The high values for GK, G6PDH, ME and ACX activity in hybrid ducks enabled them to produce heavy fatty livers with the same chemical and lipid composition as Muscovy ducks and characterised by high amounts of triglycerides (around 96% of total lipids), and saturated and mono-unsaturated fatty acids.
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Pascal Chartrin, Marie-Dominique Bernadet, Gérard Guy, Jacques Mourot, Jean-François Hocquette, Nicole Rideau, Michel Jacques Duclos, Elisabeth Baéza (2006)  Does overfeeding enhance genotype effects on energy metabolism and lipid deposition in breast muscle of ducks?   Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 145: 4. 413-418 Dec  
Abstract: We evaluated the effects of genotype (Muscovy, Pekin and their crossbreed hinny and mule ducks) and feeding levels (overfeeding between 12 and 14 weeks of age vs ad libitum feeding) on energy metabolism and lipid deposition in breast muscle of ducks. Samples of breast muscle (Pectoralis major) were collected at 14 weeks of age from 8 birds per group. Overfeeding induced an accumulation of lipids in breast muscle (1.5- to 1.7-fold, depending on genotype) mainly induced by triglyceride deposition. It also induced a considerable increase in the amounts (expressed as g/100 g of tissue) of saturated and mono-unsaturated fatty acids (SFA, MUFA), while the amounts of poly-unsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) remained unchanged in hinny and Muscovy ducks or slightly increased in Pekin and mule ducks. In breast muscle, overfeeding decreased the activity of the main enzymes involved in lipogenesis from glucose (glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, G6PDH, malic enzyme, ME, acetyl CoA carboxylase, ACX). Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity in Pectoralis major muscle was also significantly decreased (-21%). The ability of muscle tissues to catabolize long-chain fatty acids, as assessed by beta-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase (HAD) activity, was increased in Pectoralis major muscle, as was cytochrome-c oxidase (COX) activity. Hybrid and Pekin ducks exhibited higher levels of ACX and LPL activity in Pectoralis major muscle than Muscovy ducks, suggesting a greater ability to synthesise lipids in situ, and to take up circulating lipids. Total lipid content in breast muscle of hybrid and Pekin ducks was higher than in that of Muscovy ducks. In hybrid and Pekin ducks, lipid composition of breast muscle was characterized by higher amounts of triglycerides, SFA and MUFA than in Muscovy ducks. Finally, oxidative metabolism was greater in Pectoralis major muscles of hybrid and Pekin ducks than in Muscovy ducks, suggesting an adaptative strategy of muscle energy metabolism according to lipid level.
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2005
 
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K Sudre, C Leroux, I Cassar-Malek, J - F Hocquette, P Martin (2005)  A collection of bovine cDNA probes for gene expression profiling in muscle.   Mol Cell Probes 19: 1. 61-70 Feb  
Abstract: Array technology has been increasingly used to monitor global gene expression patterns in various tissues and cell types. However, applications to muscle development and pathology as well as meat production in livestock species have been hampered by the lack of appropriate cDNA collections. To overcome this problem, a directed cDNA library was constructed starting from 23 muscles of meat-producing bovines to derive a collection of 3573 clones. A preliminary sequence characterization of this collection indicated that the most abundant transcripts correspond to genes encoding proteins involved in energy metabolism (COX and NADH dehydrogenase subunits) and belonging to the contractile apparatus (myosin chains and troponin isoforms). From this cDNA library, we selected a set of 435 clones representing 340 unique genes, of which 24 were novel. This collection was subsequently completed with 75 specific cDNA probes for genes of interest already studied in our laboratory. The bovine 'muscle' cDNA repertoire thus designed was spotted onto a nylon membrane (macroarray) in order to test its utility to further investigate the transcriptome of bovine muscles in relation to meat quality traits. It is also anticipated that this type of collection might be useful for the study of chronic myologic diseases in other mammalian species, including humans.
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Bruno Meunier, Julien Bouley, Isabelle Piec, Carine Bernard, Brigitte Picard, Jean-François Hocquette (2005)  Data analysis methods for detection of differential protein expression in two-dimensional gel electrophoresis.   Anal Biochem 340: 2. 226-230 May  
Abstract: The recent development of microarray technology has led statisticians and bioinformaticians to develop new statistical methodologies for comparing different biological samples. The objective is to identify a small number of differentially expressed genes from among thousands. In quantitative proteomics, analysis of protein expression using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis shows some similarities with transcriptomic studies. Thus, the goal of this study was to evaluate different data analysis methodologies widely used in array analysis using different proteomic data sets of hundreds of proteins. Even with few replications, the significance analysis of microarrays method appeared to be more powerful than the Student's t test in truly declaring differentially expressed proteins. This procedure will avoid wasting time due to false positives and losing information with false negatives.
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Julien Bouley, Bruno Meunier, Christophe Chambon, Stefaan De Smet, Jean François Hocquette, Brigitte Picard (2005)  Proteomic analysis of bovine skeletal muscle hypertrophy.   Proteomics 5: 2. 490-500 Feb  
Abstract: Myostatin plays a major role in muscle growth and development and animals with disruption of this gene display marked increases in muscle mass. Little is known about muscle physiological adaptations in relation to this muscle hypertrophy. To provide a more comprehensive view, we analyzed bovine muscles from control, heterozygote and homozygote young Belgian blue bulls for myostatin deletion, which results in a normal level of inactive myostatin. Heterozygote and homozygote animals were characterized by a higher proportion of fast-twitch glycolytic fibers in Semitendinosus muscle. Differential proteomic analysis of this muscle was performed using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis followed by mass spectrometry. Thirteen proteins, corresponding to 28 protein spots, were significantly altered in response to the myostatin deletion. The observed changes in protein expression are consistent with an increased fast muscle phenotype, suggesting that myostatin negatively controls mainly fast-twitch glycolytic fiber number. Finally, we demonstrated that differential mRNA splicing of fast troponin T is altered by the loss of myostatin function. The structure of mutually exclusive exon 16 appears predominantly expressed in muscles from heterozygote and homozygote animals. This suggests a role for exon 16 of fast troponin T in the physiological adaptation of the fast muscle phenotype.
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C Bernard, S Degrelle, S Ollier, E Campion, I Cassar-Malek, G Charpigny, S Dhorne-Pollet, I Hue, J - F Hocquette, F Le Provost, C Leroux, F Piumi, G Rolland, S Uzbekova, E Zalachas, P Martin (2005)  A cDNA macroarray resource for gene expression profiling in ruminant tissues involved in reproduction and production (milk and beef) traits.   J Physiol Pharmacol 56 Suppl 3: 215-224 Jun  
Abstract: cDNA arrays have proven to be useful tools to screen gene expression in many animal species including livestock species. A collaborative program was launched to construct a ruminant cDNA collection, representative of three tissues: Muscle, Embryo and Mammary gland, named MEM. This collection gathers clones mainly arising from 3 non-normalised cDNA libraries: a directed bovine muscle library, a 14-day-old bovine embryo library and a goat lactating mammary library. It is made up of 1896 clones (637 muscle, 882 embryo and 377 mammary cDNAs), selected after sequencing and bioinformatic analyses. Amplification products yielded from these clones as well as controls were printed onto Nylon membranes to generate macroarrays. Hybridisation with relevant cDNA targets allowed checking the location of about 50 cDNAs and the specificity of each sub-set of the repertoire. Macroarrays were hybridised with radiolabelled cDNA complex targets from five different tissues (muscle, embryo, mammary gland, adipose tissue and oocyte). Both somatic and germinal complex targets gave valid hybridisation signals with 45 to 80% of the printed probes. This specific cDNA collection now provides a powerful tool for transcriptomic studies with the ultimate objective to better understand physiological and metabolic functions in ruminants. It will be subsequently included into a forthcoming larger collection.
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Anne Listrat, Jean François Hocquette, Brigitte Picard, François Ménissier, Jean Djiane, Hélène Jammes (2005)  Growth hormone receptor gene expression in the skeletal muscle of normal and double-muscled bovines during foetal development.   Reprod Nutr Dev 45: 4. 393-403 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: The expression of the growth hormone receptor (GHR) gene was investigated in semitendinosus muscle during bovine foetal development in both normal and double-muscled Charolais foetuses which differ with respect to muscle development. Northern-blot analysis of foetal muscle RNA preparations with a GHR cDNA probe identified the 4.5 kb GHR mRNA as early as 130 days post-conception. In double-muscled animals, the expression of GHR mRNA increased from 130 to 210 days of gestation while it stayed stable in normal ones. It was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in double-muscled foetuses compared to normal ones from the second third of gestation. Northern-blot analysis of foetal muscle RNA preparations from both genotypes with a beta-actin cDNA probe, revealed lower beta-actin gene expression in double-muscled foetuses than in normal ones, suggesting a delay in the differentiation of muscle cells. In situ hybridisation revealed the localisation of specific GHR mRNA in muscle cells at all gestation stages analysed (130, 170, 210 days post-conception) but not in connective tissue surrounding the muscle cells. At the adult stage, the hybridisation signal was also very high and observed in muscle cells only. These results show the ontogeny of GHR mRNA in bovine muscle and demonstrate a difference between normal and double-muscled animals.
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PMID 
J F Hocquette (2005)  Where are we in genomics?   J Physiol Pharmacol 56 Suppl 3: 37-70 Jun  
Abstract: Genomic studies provide scientists with methods to quickly analyse genes and their products en masse. The first high-throughput techniques to be developed were sequencing methods. A great number of genomes from different organisms have thus been sequenced. Genomics is now shifting to the study of gene expression and function. In the past 5-10 years genomics, proteomics and high-throughput microarray technologies have fundamentally changed our ability to study the molecular basis of cells and tissues in health and diseases, giving a new comprehensive view. For example, in cancer research we have seen new diagnostic opportunities for tumour classification, and prognostication. A new exciting development is metabolomics and lab-on-a-chip techniques (which combine miniaturization and automation) for metabolic studies. However, to interpret the large amount of data, extensive computational development is required. In the coming years, we will see the study of biological networks dominating the scene in Physiology. The great accumulation of genomics information will be used in computer programs to simulate biologic processes. Originally developed for genome analysis, bioinformatics now encompasses a wide range of fields in biology from gene studies to integrated biology (i.e. combination of different data sets from genes to metabolites). This is systems biology which aims to study biological organisms as a whole. In medicine, scientific results and applied biotechnologies arising from genomics will be used for effective prediction of diseases and risk associated with drugs. Preventive medicine and medical therapy will be personalized. Widespread applications of genomics for personalized medicine will require associations of gene expression pattern with diagnoses, treatment and clinical data. This will help in the discovery and development of drugs. In agriculture and animal science, the outcomes of genomics will include improvement in food safety, in crop yield, in traceability and in quality of animal products (dairy products and meat) through increased efficiency in breeding and better knowledge of animal physiology. Genomics and integrated biology are huge tasks and no single lab can pursue this alone. We are probably at the end of the beginning rather than at the beginning of the end because Genomics will probably change Biology to a greater extent than previously forecasted. In addition, there is a great need for more information and better understanding of genomics before complete public acceptance.
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2004
 
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Virginie Rimbert, Yves Boirie, Mario Bedu, Jean-François Hocquette, Patrick Ritz, Béatrice Morio (2004)  Muscle fat oxidative capacity is not impaired by age but by physical inactivity: association with insulin sensitivity.   FASEB J 18: 6. 737-739 Apr  
Abstract: The study aimed at determining whether aging and/or sedentariness impairs muscle fat oxidative capacity (OXFA) and whether this was associated with increased risk to develop insulin resistance. We first examined muscle mitochondrial functions, OXFA and insulin sensitivity (ISI; evaluated during an oral glucose tolerance test) in a cross-sectional study with 32 sedentary (S) and endurance-trained (T), young (Y) and elderly (E) men (24.2+/-2.6 vs. 66.6+/-3.2 yr). As for mitochondrial functions, OXFA was higher in T than in S but similar between age groups (SY 41.8+/-11.3, TY 68.0+/-17.7, SE 40.1+/-14.1, TE 73.1+/-20.1 palmitate x min(-1) x g wet tissue(-1); activity P<0.0001, age P=NS, activity x age P=NS). Similar results were obtained with ISI (SY 6.2+/-2.2, TY 11.4+/-4.4, SE 5.9+/-1.5, TE 11.0+/-3.5, activity P<0.001, age P=NS, activity x age P=NS). Stepwise regression showed that, among body composition, VO2max and muscle biochemical characteristics, OXFA was the main predictor of ISI (r=0.60, P<0.001). We subsequently showed in eight sedentary elderly subjects (63.5+/-3.3 yr) that OXFA and insulin sensitivity (measured using insulin clamp) improved in parallel after 8 weeks of endurance training (r=0.79, P<0.01). We concluded that mitochondrial functions, OXFA and ISI, are not impaired by age but by physical inactivity and are closely correlated.
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Florence Gondret, Jean-François Hocquette, Patrick Herpin (2004)  Age-related relationships between muscle fat content and metabolic traits in growing rabbits.   Reprod Nutr Dev 44: 1. 1-16 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: This study was aimed at ascribing muscle fat accretion in growing rabbits to changes in several extra-muscular and intra-muscular metabolic pathways. At 10 wk or 20 wk of age (n = 8 per group), tissue lipid content and metabolic indicators of nutrient anabolic or catabolic pathways were simultaneously assessed in the liver, perirenal fat, the heart and the Longissimus lumborum (LL) muscle, together with plasma concentrations in energy-yielding metabolites. Lipid content significantly increased with age (P < or = 0.01) in the glycolytic LL muscle (+67%) and the oxidative heart (+30%). In the former muscle, it was statistically correlated (r2 = 0.68; P < 0.01) to the changes in the orientation of muscle metabolism towards an enhanced lipogenic capacity and a depressed capacity for fatty acid transport and nutrient oxidation, and to indications of lower availability in plasma glucose and triglycerides. In the heart, age-related fat accretion was positively associated (r2 = 0.48, P < 0.01) to intrinsic metabolic changes towards an enhanced lipogenic capacity, together with a lower availability in plasma glucose. Variables representative of cardiac catabolic capacity tended to be negatively correlated to fat content in the heart (r2 = 0.15, P = 0.07). In growing rabbits, muscle fat content variation was proven to result from a reciprocal balance between catabolic and anabolic fatty acid fluxes, rather than to be assigned to one specific energy metabolic pathway.
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PMID 
Muriel Bonnet, Yannick Faulconnier, Jean-François Hocquette, François Bocquier, Christine Leroux, Patrice Martin, Yves Chilliard (2004)  Nutritional status induces divergent variations of GLUT4 protein content, but not lipoprotein lipase activity, between adipose tissues and muscles in adult cattle.   Br J Nutr 92: 4. 617-625 Oct  
Abstract: Metabolic adaptations to variations in food supply are incompletely understood in ruminant animal adipose tissue (AT) and muscle. To explore this, we studied lipid metabolism and glucose transport potential in one internal and one external AT, as well as in one oxidative and one glycolytic muscle from control, 7 d underfed and 21 d refed adult cows. Refeeding increased (+79 to +307 %) the activities of enzymes involved in de novo lipogenesis (fatty acid synthase, malic enzyme, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase) in perirenal and subcutaneous AT; underfeeding did not modify these variables. Underfeeding decreased the activities of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) in perirenal AT (-70 %) and cardiac muscle (-67 %), but did not modify the activities in subcutaneous AT and longissimus thoracis. Refeeding increased LPL activities in all tissues (+40 to +553 %) to levels comparable with (cardiac muscle) or greater than (AT, longissimus thoracis) those observed in control cows. Such variations in perirenal and cardiac muscle LPL activities did not result from variations in LPL mRNA levels, but suggest a post-transcriptional regulation of LPL in these nutritional conditions. Underfeeding did not modify GLUT4 contents in perirenal AT and muscles, while refeeding increased it only in perirenal AT (+250 %). Our present results contrast with previous results in rats, where LPL is regulated in opposite directions in AT and muscles, and GLUT4 is generally increased by fasting and decreased by refeeding in skeletal muscles. The present results highlight the bovine specificity of the response, which probably arises in part from peculiarities of ruminant animals for nutrient digestion and absorption.
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Florence Gondret, Sanjay B Jadhao, Marie Damon, Patrick Herpin, Céline Viglietta, Louis-Marie Houdebine, Jean-François Hocquette (2004)  Unusual metabolic characteristics in skeletal muscles of transgenic rabbits for human lipoprotein lipase.   Lipids Health Dis 3: Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The lipoprotein lipase (LPL) hydrolyses circulating triacylglycerol-rich lipoproteins. Thereby, LPL acts as a metabolic gate-keeper for fatty acids partitioning between adipose tissue for storage and skeletal muscle primarily for energy use. Transgenic mice that markedly over-express LPL exclusively in muscle, show increases not only in LPL activity, but also in oxidative enzyme activities and in number of mitochondria, together with an impaired glucose tolerance. However, the role of LPL in intracellular nutrient pathways remains uncertain. To examine differences in muscle nutrient uptake and fatty acid oxidative pattern, transgenic rabbits harboring a DNA fragment of the human LPL gene (hLPL) and their wild-type littermates were compared for two muscles of different metabolic type, and for perirenal fat. RESULTS: Analyses of skeletal muscles and adipose tissue showed the expression of the hLPL DNA fragment in tissues of the hLPL group only. Unexpectedly, the activity level of LPL in both tissues was similar in the two groups. Nevertheless, mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation rate, measured ex vivo using [1-(14C)]oleate as substrate, was lower in hLPL rabbits than in wild-type rabbits for the two muscles under study. Both insulin-sensitive glucose transporter GLUT4 and muscle fatty acid binding protein (H-FABP) contents were higher in hLPL rabbits than in wild-type littermates for the pure oxidative semimembranosus proprius muscle, but differences between groups did not reach significance when considering the fast-twitch glycolytic longissimus muscle. Variations in both glucose uptake potential, intra-cytoplasmic binding of fatty acids, and lipid oxidation rate observed in hLPL rabbits compared with their wild-type littermates, were not followed by any modifications in tissue lipid content, body fat, and plasma levels in energy-yielding metabolites. CONCLUSIONS: Expression of intracellular binding proteins for both fatty acids and glucose, and their following oxidation rates in skeletal muscles of hLPL rabbits were not fully consistent with the physiology rules. The modifications observed in muscle metabolic properties might not be directly associated with any LPL-linked pathways, but resulted likely of transgene random insertion into rabbit organism close to any regulatory genes. Our findings enlighten the risks for undesirable phenotypic modifications in micro-injected animals and difficulties of biotechnology in mammals larger than mice.
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Florence Gondret, Marie Damon, Sanjay B Jadhao, Louis-Marie Houdebine, Patrick Herpin, Jean-François Hocquette (2004)  Age-related changes in glucose utilization and fatty acid oxidation in a muscle-specific manner during rabbit growth.   J Muscle Res Cell Motil 25: 4-5. 405-410  
Abstract: The optimal utilization of energy substrates in muscle fibers is of primary importance for muscle contraction and whole body physiology. This study aimed to investigate the age-related changes in some indicators of glucose catabolism and fatty acid oxidation in muscles of growing rabbits. Longissimus lumborum (fast-twitch, LL) and semimembranosus proprius (slow-twitch, SMP) muscles were collected at 10 or 20 weeks of age ( n=6 per age). Glucose transporter GLUT4 content was investigated by immunoblot assay. Activity levels of five enzymes were measured: lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and phosphofructokinase (PFK) for glycolysis; citrate synthase (CS), isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH) and -3-hydroxyacyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase (HAD) for oxidation. Mitochondrial and peroxisomal oxidation rates were assessed on fresh homogenates using [1-14C]-oleate as substrate. At both ages, mitochondrial and peroxisomal oxidations rates, as well as activities of oxidative enzymes were higher in SMP than in LL. In both muscles, the apparent rate of fatty acid oxidation by the mitochondria did not differ between the two ages. However, a decrease in the activities of the three oxidative enzymes was observed in LL, whereas activities of CS and HAD and peroxisomal oxidation rate of oleate increased between the two ages in SMP muscle. In both muscles, LDH activity increased between 10 and 20 weeks, without variations in glucose uptake (GLUT4 transporter content) and in the first step of glucose utilization (PFK activity). In conclusion, mitochondrial oxidation rate of fatty acids and activities of selected mitochondrial enzymes were largely unrelated. Moreover, regulation of energy metabolism with advancing age differed between muscle types.
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2003
 
PMID 
Isabelle Ortigues-Marty, Jean-François Hocquette, Gérard Bertrand, Christophe Martineau, Michel Vermorel, René Toullec (2003)  The incorporation of solubilized wheat proteins in milk replacers for veal calves: effects on growth performance and muscle oxidative capacity.   Reprod Nutr Dev 43: 1. 57-76 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: Replacement of skim milk proteins by solubilized wheat protein (SWP) in milk replacers for veal calves would contribute to the reduction in feeding costs. The occurrence of metabolic disorders has, however, been reported. Forty-two male calves received one of three treatments over 140 days: a control diet, a diet containing SWP without or with branched-chain amino acid supplementation. Liveweight gain, carcass yield, color and conformation did not show any significant differences. No metabolic disorders were noted. Supplementation with branched-chain amino acids reduced the marginal Val deficiency but did not modify the growth performances. With the SWP containing diets, the plasma metabolite profile was characteristic of those observed with non-clotting diets. It was statistically correlated to the changes in the orientation of the Semitendinosus muscle energy metabolism towards a more oxidative type and to indications of a lower efficiency of amino acid utilisation for protein deposition. At the present levels of inclusion, SWP proved to be an interesting alternative to the sole use of whey as the protein source in milk replacers for veal calves.
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Patrick Herpin, Annie Vincent, Martine Fillaut, Bruno Piteira Bonito, Jean-François Hocquette (2003)  Mitochondrial and peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation capacities increase in the skeletal muscles of young pigs during early postnatal development but are not affected by cold stress.   Reprod Nutr Dev 43: 2. 155-166 Mar/Apr  
Abstract: In pigs, the optimal utilization of energy substrates within muscle fibers is a prerequisite of the utmost importance for successful adaptation to extra-uterine life. In the present work we demonstrate that fatty acid (FA) oxidative capacities increased within the first five days of life in piglet skeletal muscle. Mitochondrial FA oxidation capacities increased more in the rhomboideus oxidative than in the longissimus lumborum glycolytic muscle (+114% vs. +62%, P < 0.001). The apparent rate of fatty acid degradation by peroxisomes represents 30 to 40% of total FA oxidation capacities and increased by about 170% (P < 0.001) with age in both muscles. The postnatal enhancement of skeletal muscle oxidative capacities was further supported by a rise in acid-soluble and long-chain acylcamitine tissue levels (+67%, P < 0.01), and plasma levels of albumin (+160%, P < 0.001). Cold stress had no effect on mitochondrial and peroxisomal FA oxidation but greatly enhanced (+61%, P < 0.05) the circulating levels of non-esterified fatty acids at five days of life.
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Karine Sudre, Christine Leroux, Geneviève Piétu, Isabelle Cassar-Malek, Elisabeth Petit, Anne Listrat, Charles Auffray, Brigitte Picard, Patrice Martin, Jean-François Hocquette (2003)  Transcriptome analysis of two bovine muscles during ontogenesis.   J Biochem 133: 6. 745-756 Jun  
Abstract: Macro-arrays, on which 1339 human skeletal muscle cDNA clone inserts had been spotted as PCR products, were used to make large-scale measurement of gene expression in bovine muscles during ontogenesis. Ten complex cDNA targets derived from two mixed muscle samples, Rectus abdominis (rather red oxidative muscle, RA) and Semitendinosus (rather white glycolytic muscle, ST), were taken from foetuses at 4 different stages (110, 180, 210, and 260 days post-conception) and from 15-month-old young bulls to generate differential expression patterns. Each sample analysed was prepared from a pool of RNA extracted from muscle tissues sampled from at least 6 different animals. Approximately 200 expression signals were validated and taken into account to provide a first "bovine" muscle gene repertoire. Despite the relatively small number of probes and the heterologous approach, this made it possible to identify up to 7 genes differentially expressed between RA and ST, depending on age. From 110 days post-conception to 15 months of age, differences in the expression levels of 110 genes were detected in the four comparisons between two consecutive ages. By comparing 260 days post-conception foetal muscles and adult muscles, up to 87 genes were overexpressed, whereas only 7 genes were shown to be down-regulated. Among these genes, 33% have unknown biological functions. Taken together, the results reported here underline the importance of the last three months of gestation in muscle myogenesis, and highlight new genes involved in this process.
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2002
 
PMID 
Sophie Lemosquet, Elisabeth Debras, Michèle Balage, Jean François Hocquette, Henri Rulquin, Jean Grizard (2002)  Short-term mild hyperglycemia enhances insulin-stimulated glucose disposal in lactating goats.   Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 282: 2. R464-R474 Feb  
Abstract: This work was designed to study the effect of a 3-day mild hyperglycemia (5.3 vs. 3.3 mM) on the regulation of glucose metabolism in lactating goats. Glucose was intravenously infused at variable rates simultaneously with a constant potassium-amino acid infusion. Diet plus substrate infusion maintained net energy but not protein supply. Milk yield did not change. Skeletal muscle glucose transporter (GLUT-4) was analyzed before and after hyperglycemia. In addition, the acute effect of medium and high insulin doses on glucose turnover was measured in vivo during euglycemic and hyperglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamps under potassium and amino acid replacement. Hyperglycemia reduced the endogenous glucose appearance but increased glucose disposal. It decreased the total membrane-associated GLUT-4 protein in skeletal muscle. In contrast, it improved the acute insulin-stimulated glucose disposal. Both the level and duration (3 days) of hyperglycemia contributed to this improvement. We conclude that short-term mild hyperglycemia has similar effects in lactating goats as those already observed in nonlactating rodents or humans.
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Hocquette, Brandstetter (2002)  Common practice in molecular biology may introduce statistical bias and misleading biological interpretation.   J Nutr Biochem 13: 6. 370-377 Jun  
Abstract: In studies on enzyme activity or gene expression at the protein level, data are usually analyzed by using a standard curve after subtracting blank values. In most cases and for most techniques (spectrophotometric assays, ELISA), this approach satisfies the basic principles of linearity and specificity. In our experience, this might be also the case for Western-blot analysis. By contrast, mRNA data are usually presented as arbitrary units of the ratio of a target RNA over levels of a control RNA species. We here demonstrate by simple experiments and various examples that this data-normalization procedure may result in misleading conclusions. Common molecular biology techniques have never been carefully tested according to the basic principles of validation of quantitative techniques. We thus prefer a regression-based approach for quantifying mRNA levels relatively to a control RNA species by Northern-blot, semi-quantitative RT-PCR or similar techniques. This type of techniques is also characterized by a lower reproducibility for repeated assays when compared to biochemical analyses. Therefore, we also recommend to design experiments, which allow the detection of a similar range of variance by biochemical and molecular biology techniques. Otherwise, spurious conclusions may be provided regarding the control level of gene expression.
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PMID 
A Orzechowski, B Gajkowska, U Wojewódzka, I Cassar-Malek, B Picard, J F Hocquette (2002)  Immunohistochemical analysis of bFGF, TGF-beta1 and catalase in rectus abdominis muscle from cattle foetuses at 180 and 260 days post-conception.   Tissue Cell 34: 6. 416-426 Dec  
Abstract: The potential for muscle growth depends on myoblast proliferation, which occurs essentially during the first two thirds of the foetal period in cattle. Thereafter, myofibres acquire their contractile and metabolic properties. Proliferation is regulated by molecular growth factors and by the tissue oxidative activity. The aim of this study was the quantification by immunochemistry of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-beta1) and also of enzyme catalase (CAT) activity in rectus abdominis muscle. Samples were collected from cattle foetuses of different growth potential at 180 and 260 days post-conception (dpc). One major conclusion from this work is that protein contents of the muscle tissue bFGF and, to a lower extent, CAT activity decreased with increasing age during the foetal life. No differences were found between the different genotypes of cattle. However, the CAT to bFGF ratio tended to be lower in fast-growing cattle and increased with foetal age. TGF-beta1 did not change with age and was localised mostly at the vascular bed. CAT was detected in smooth and rough reticulum in striated muscles at 180dpc, and additionally in mitochondria at 260dpc. In conclusion, the balance between intracellular growth factors (bFGF and TGF-beta1) and the activity of antioxidant enzyme CAT may participate in the regulation of the transition from myoblast proliferation to differentiation. Thus, increased ratio of CAT to bFGF might be a good index indicating initiation of muscle maturation in cattle foetus prior to birth.
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Arkadiusz Orzechowski, Małgorzata Łokociejewska, Patrycja Muras, Jean-Francois Hocquette (2002)  Preconditioning with millimolar concentrations of vitamin C or N-acetylcysteine protects L6 muscle cells insulin-stimulated viability and DNA synthesis under oxidative stress.   Life Sci 71: 15. 1793-1808 Aug  
Abstract: The effect of reactive oxygen/nitrogen species (ROS/RNS)(hydrogen peroxide -- H(2)O(2), superoxide anion radical O(2)*- and hydroxyl radical *OH -- the reaction products of hypoxanthine/xanthine oxidase system), nitric oxide (NO* from sodium nitroprusside -- SNP), and peroxynitrite (ONOO(-) from 3-morpholinosydnonimine -- SIN-1) on insulin mitogenic effect was studied in L6 muscle cells after one day pretreatment with/or without antioxidants. ROS/RNS inhibited insulin-induced mitogenicity (DNA synthesis). Insulin (0.1 microM), however, markedly improved mitogenicity in the muscle cells treated with increased concentrations (0.1, 0.5, 1 mM) of donors of H(2)O(2), O(2)*-, *OH, ONOO(-) and NO*. Cell viability assessed by morphological criteria was also monitored. Massive apoptosis was induced by 1 mM of donors of H(2)O(2) and ONOO(-), while NO* additionally induced necrotic cell death. Taken together, these results have shown that ROS/RNS provide a good explanation for the developing resistance to the growth promoting activity of insulin in myoblasts under conditions of oxidative or nitrosative stress. Cell viability showed that neither donor induced cell death when given below 0.5 mM. In order to confirm the deleterious effects of ROS/RNS prior to the subsequent treatment with ROS/RNS plus insulin one day pretreatment with selected antioxidants (sodium ascorbate - ASC (0.01, 0.1, 1 mM), or N-acetylcysteine - NAC (0.1, 1, 10 mM) was carried out. Surprisingly, at a low dose (micromolar) antioxidants did not abrogate and even worsened the concentration-dependent effects of ROS/RNS. In contrast, pretreatment with millimolar dose of ASC or NAC maintained an elevated mitogenicity in response to insulin irrespective of the ROS/RNS donor type used.
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2001
 
PMID 
B Morio, J F Hocquette, C Montaurier, Y Boirie, C Bouteloup-Demange, C McCormack, N Fellmann, B Beaufrère, P Ritz (2001)  Muscle fatty acid oxidative capacity is a determinant of whole body fat oxidation in elderly people.   Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 280: 1. E143-E149 Jan  
Abstract: In sedentary elderly people, a reduced muscle fatty acid oxidative capacity (MFOC) may explain a decrease in whole body fat oxidation. Eleven sedentary and seven regularly exercising subjects (65.6 +/- 4. 5 yr) were characterized for their aerobic fitness [maximal O(2) uptake (VO(2 max))/kg fat free mass (FFM)] and their habitual daily physical activity level [free-living daily energy expenditure divided by sleeping metabolic rate (DEE(FLC)/SMR)]. MFOC was determined by incubating homogenates of vastus lateralis muscle with [1-(14)C]palmitate. Whole body fat oxidation was measured by indirect calorimetry over 24 h. MFOC was 40.4 +/- 14.7 and 44.3 +/- 16.3 nmol palmitate. g wet tissue(-1). min(-1) in the sedentary and regularly exercising individuals, respectively (P = nonsignificant). MFOC was positively correlated with DEE(FLC)/SMR (r = 0.58, P < 0. 05) but not with VO(2 max)/kg FFM (r = 0.35, P = nonsignificant). MFOC was the main determinant of fat oxidation during all time periods including physical activity. Indeed, MFOC explained 19.7 and 30.5% of the variance in fat oxidation during walking and during the alert period, respectively (P < 0.05). Furthermore, MFOC explained 23.0% of the variance in fat oxidation over 24 h (P < 0.05). It was concluded that, in elderly people, MFOC may be influenced more by overall daily physical activity than by regular exercising. MFOC is a major determinant of whole body fat oxidation during physical activities and, consequently, over 24 h.
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Y Geay, D Bauchart, J F Hocquette, J Culioli (2001)  Effect of nutritional factors on biochemical, structural and metabolic characteristics of muscles in ruminants, consequences on dietetic value and sensorial qualities of meat.   Reprod Nutr Dev 41: 1. 1-26 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: Ruminant meat is an important source of nutrients and is also of high sensory value. However, the importance and nature of these characteristics depend on ruminant nutrition. The first part of this review is focused on biochemical and dietetic value of this meat. It offers a panel of quantitative and qualitative contributions, especially through its fatty acids characteristics. Since saturated and trans-monounsaturated fatty acids are considered as harmful to human health, their amount in muscles can be reduced by increasing the proportions of dietary polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) absorbed by the animals. On the contrary, some fatty acids (n-6 and n-3 PUFA, conjugated linoleic acid) specifically incorporated in muscle tissues would play a favourable role in the prevention or reduction of major diseases in human (cancers, atherosclerosis, obesity) and therefore be recommended. The second part of this review treats different aspects of the sensorial qualities of meat. Skeletal muscle structure and its biochemical components influence muscle transformation to meat and sensorial qualities including tenderness, colour, flavour and juiciness. This paper shows how nutrition can influence, in ruminants, metabolic activity as well as muscle structure and composition, and thereby affect meat quality.
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PMID 
J F Hocquette, B Graulet, M Vermorel, D Bauchart (2001)  Weaning affects lipoprotein lipase activity and gene expression in adipose tissues and in masseter but not in other muscles of the calf.   Br J Nutr 86: 4. 433-441 Oct  
Abstract: The nutritional and physiological modifications that occur during the weaning period induce adaptations of tissue metabolism in all mammal species. Among the adaptations due to weaning in ruminants, the regulation of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity, one of the rate-limiting steps of fatty acid utilization by tissues, was still unknown. The present study aimed at comparing LPL activity and gene expression in the heart, seven skeletal muscles and three adipose tissue sites between two groups of seven preruminant (PR) or ruminant (R) calves having a similar age (170 d), similar empty body weight (194 kg) at slaughter, and similar net energy intake from birth onwards. Triacylglycerol content of adipose tissues was 16 % lower in R than in PR calves, This could be partly the result from a lower LPL activity (-57 %, ). LPL mRNA levels were also lower in R calves (-48 % to -68 %, ) suggesting a pretranslational regulation of LPL activity. Activity and mRNA levels of LPL did not differ significantly in the heart and skeletal muscles except in the masseter in which LPL activity and mRNA levels were higher (+50 % and +120 % respectively, ) in the R calves. Regulation of LPL in masseter could be explained by the high contractile activity of this muscle after weaning due to solid food chewing. In conclusion, weaning in the calf affects LPL activity and expression in adipose tissues, but not in skeletal muscles except the masseter.
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2000
 
PMID 
M Bonnet, C Leroux, Y Faulconnier, J F Hocquette, F Bocquier, P Martin, Y Chilliard (2000)  Lipoprotein lipase activity and mRNA are up-regulated by refeeding in adipose tissue and cardiac muscle of sheep.   J Nutr 130: 4. 749-756 Apr  
Abstract: Previous studies in rodents have shown that the lipoprotein lipase (LPL) regulation is complex and often opposite in adipose tissue (AT) and muscle in response to the same nutritional treatment. However, neither LPL responses nor the molecular mechanisms involved in the nutritional regulation have been studied in both AT and muscle of ruminant species. To explore this, we measured the LPL activity and mRNA levels in perirenal AT and cardiac muscle (CM) of control, 7-d-underfed or 14-d-refed ewes. Underfeeding decreased (P < 0.01) LPL activity both in AT (-59%) and CM (-31%), and these activities were restored (P < 0.01) by refeeding (AT, +248%; CM, +34%). Variations of LPL mRNA level measured by real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction or by Northern blot followed variations of LPL activity: underfeeding decreased AT- and CM-LPL mRNA levels (-58 and -53%, respectively), and refeeding restored (P < 0.01) them in CM (+117%) and increased them over the baseline in AT (+640%). Quantification of either 3.4- or 3.8-kb LPL mRNA levels revealed a predominant (P < 0.001) expression of the 3.4-kb mRNA in AT (60%) and of the 3.8-kb mRNA in CM (56%), without any preferential regulation of one of these mRNA species by the nutritional status. This work reveals a tissue-specific expression pattern of the ovine LPL gene and a pretranslational nutritional regulation of its expression, which is achieved in the same direction in perirenal AT and CM. The different regulation of CM-LPL between ewes and rats probably arises from peculiarities of ruminant species for nutrient digestion and absorption and liver lipogenesis.
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PMID 
A M Brandstetter, M W Pfaffl, J F Hocquette, D E Gerrard, B Picard, Y Geay, H Sauerwein (2000)  Effects of muscle type, castration, age, and compensatory growth rate on androgen receptor mRNA expression in bovine skeletal muscle.   J Anim Sci 78: 3. 629-637 Mar  
Abstract: The effect of testosterone on sexual dimorphism is evident by differential growth of forelimb and neck muscles in bulls and steers. Divergent hormone sensitivites may account for the differential growth rates of individual muscles. Therefore, the objective of this study was to compare androgen receptor (AR) expression in three different muscles of bulls and steers at various ages and growth rates. Thirty Montbéliard bulls and 30 steers were assigned to four slaughter age groups. Four or five animals of each sex were slaughtered at 4 and 8 mo of age. Animals in the remaining two slaughter groups (12 and 16 mo) were divided into groups of either restricted (R) or ad libitum (AL) access to feed. Five animals of each sex and diet were slaughtered at the end of the restricted intake period at 12 mo of age. To simulate compensatory growth, the remaining animals (R and AL) were allowed ad libitum access to feed until slaughter at 16 mo of age. Total RNA was extracted from samples of semitendinosus (ST), triceps brachii (TB), and splenius (SP) muscles. Androgen receptor mRNA was quantified in 200-ng total RNA preparations using an internally standardized reverse transcription (RT) PCR assay. Data were analyzed using 18S ribosomal RNA concentrations as a covariable. Steers had higher AR mRNA levels per RNA unit than bulls (P < .01). Androgen receptor mRNA levels differed between muscles (P < .05), with lowest expression in the SP. The pattern of AR expression differed (P < .05) for each muscle with increasing age. Between 4 and 12 mo of age, AR mRNA levels increased (P < .05) in SP but remained unchanged in the ST and TB. Feeding regimen had no effect on muscle AR expression, but steers exhibiting compensatory growth had higher AR mRNA levels than AL steers (P < .01) or bulls (P < .01). Our results show that AR expression is muscle-specific and may be modulated by circulating testicular hormones. These data suggest that the regulation of AR expression may be linked to allometric muscle growth patterns in cattle and compensatory gain in steers.
Notes:
 
PMID 
C Piot, J F Hocquette, P Herpin, J H Veerkamp, D Bauchart (2000)  Dietary coconut oil affects more lipoprotein lipase activity than the mitochondria oxidative capacities in muscles of preruminant calves.   J Nutr Biochem 11: 4. 231-238 Apr  
Abstract: The presence of coconut oil in a milk replacer stimulates the growth rate of calves, suggesting a better oxidation of fatty acid in muscles. Because dietary fatty acid composition influences carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT I) activity in rat muscles, this study was designed to examine the effects of a milk replacer containing either tallow (TA) or coconut oil (CO) on fatty acid utilization and oxidation and on the characteristics of intermyofibrillar (IM) and subsarcolemmal (SS) mitochondria in the heart and skeletal muscles of preruminant calves. Feeding CO did not affect palmitate oxidation rate by whole homogenates, but induced higher palmitate oxidation by IM mitochondria (+37%, P < 0.05). CPT I activity did not significantly differ between the two groups of calves. Heart and longissimus thoracis muscle of calves fed CO had higher lipoprotein lipase activity (+27% and 58%, respectively; P < 0.05) but showed no differences in fatty acid binding protein content or activity of oxidative enzymes. Whatever the muscle and the diet, IM mitochondria had higher respiration rates and enzyme activities than those of SS mitochondria (P < 0.05). Furthermore, CPT I activity of the heart was 28-fold less sensitive to malonyl-coenzyme A inhibition in IM mitochondria than in SS mitochondria. In conclusion, dietary CO marginally affected the activity of the two mitochondrial populations and the oxidative activity of muscles in the preruminant calf. In addition, this study showed that differences between IM and SS mitochondria in the heart and muscles were higher in calves than in other species studied so far.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J F Hocquette, H Abe (2000)  Facilitative glucose transporters in livestock species.   Reprod Nutr Dev 40: 6. 517-533 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: The study of facilitative glucose transporters (GLUT) requires carefully done immunological experiments and sensitive molecular biology approaches to identify the various mechanisms which control GLUT expression at the RNA and protein levels. The cloning of species-specific GLUT cDNAs showed that GLUT4 and GLUT1 diverge less among species than other GLUT isoforms. The key role of GLUT in glucose homeostasis has been demonstrated in livestock species. In vitro studies have suggested specific roles of GLUT1 and GLUT3 in avian cells. In vivo studies have demonstrated a regulation of GLUTs (especially of GLUT4) by nutritional and hormonal factors in pigs and cattle, in lactating cows and goats and throughout the foetal life in the placenta and tissues of lambs and calves. All these results suggest that any changes in GLUT expression and activity (such as GLUT4 in muscles) could modify nutrient partitioning and tissue metabolism, and hence, the qualities of animal products (milk, meat).
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Listrat, C Lethias, J F Hocquette, G Renand, F Ménissier, Y Geay, B Picard (2000)  Age-related changes and location of types I, III, XII and XIV collagen during development of skeletal muscles from genetically different animals.   Histochem J 32: 6. 349-356 Jun  
Abstract: The ontogenesis of total collagen and of different collagen types was studied in four muscle types from genetically different cattle. Hydroxyproline content was 1.2-fold higher in muscles from cross-bred foetuses with normal muscle growth compared to those of the other genetic types (pure bred with different growth rates, double-muscled breed). A similar tendency was observed for type III collagen content. In all muscles of each animal studied, type XII and XIV collagens were colocated in perimysium. Immunolabelling obtained for type XII collagen was higher during foetal life than after birth, while for type XIV collagen, the opposite result was obtained. Whatever the muscle studied, but especially in semitendinosus muscle, during the foetal and the post-natal period until 15 months of age, immunolabelling with antibody anti-type XIV collagen tended to be more intense in muscles of animals from fathers selected for a low muscle growth capacity compared to those from fathers selected for a high muscle growth capacity. In conclusion, this study shows, that during foetal life, selection according to muscle growth capacity has no significant effect on the contents of total hydroxyproline or type III collagen, but minor effects on collagen localization.
Notes:
1999
 
PMID 
J F Hocquette, P Bas, D Bauchart, M Vermorel, Y Geay (1999)  Fat partitioning and biochemical characteristics of fatty tissues in relation to plasma metabolites and hormones in normal and double-muscled young growing bulls.   Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 122: 1. 127-138 Jan  
Abstract: Plasma metabolites and hormones, and the biochemical characteristics of four fatty tissues (FT) were studied in two groups of six normal (N) or six double-muscled (DM) Belgian Blue young growing bulls fed the same net energy amount at the same live weight and slaughtered at 10 months of age. Average daily gain and feed efficiency did not significantly differ between the two groups. However, the DM bulls exhibited a higher proportion of muscles (+22%, P < 0.01) and a reduced proportion of fat (-49%, P < 0.01) mainly in the subcutaneous FT (-80%, P < 0.05). Triiodothyronine, insulin and glucose plasma concentrations tended to be lower in DM bulls (-24%, P < 0.02; -27%, P = 0.14; -7%, P = 0.06, respectively) and were positively related to the higher fat development in N bulls. From the results of total protein. DNA, lipid and TG contents of FT, it appeared that a reduction in fat storage per fat cell (hypotrophy) or a reduction in total fat cell number (hypoplasia) could explain, in DM bulls, two-thirds and one-third of the reduction of perirenal and subcutaneous FT weights, respectively, as compared to N bulls. In contrast, either hypotrophy or hypoplasia was the main cause of omental or intermuscular FT weight reduction in DM animals.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J F Hocquette, D Bauchart (1999)  Intestinal absorption, blood transport and hepatic and muscle metabolism of fatty acids in preruminant and ruminant animals.   Reprod Nutr Dev 39: 1. 27-48 Jan/Feb  
Abstract: Current research on lipid metabolism in ruminants aims to improve the growth and health of the animals and the muscle characteristics associated with meat quality. This review, therefore, focuses on fatty acid (FA) metabolism from absorption to partitioning between tissues and metabolic pathways. In young calves, which were given high-fat milk diets, lipid absorption is delayed because the coagulation of milk caseins results in the retention of dietary fat as an insoluble clot in the abomasum. After weaning, the calves were fed forage- and cereal-based diets containing low levels of long-chain fatty acids (LCFA) but leading to high levels of volatile fatty acid (VFA) production by the rumen microflora. Such differences in dietary FA affect: i) the lipid transport system via the production of lipoproteins by the intestine and the liver, and (ii) the subsequent metabolism of lipids and FA by tissues. In preruminant calves, high-fat feed stimulates the secretion of triacylglycerols (TG)-rich lipoproteins (chylomicrons, very-low density lipoproteins (VLDL)). Diets rich in polyunsaturated FA (PUFA) stimulate the production of chylomicrons by the intestine (at peak lipid absorption) and of high density lipoproteins by the liver, leading to high blood concentrations of cholesterol. High levels of non-esterified FA (NEFA) uptake by the liver in high-yielding dairy cows in early lactation leads to TG infiltration of the hepatocytes (fatty liver). This is due to the low chronic capacity of the liver to synthesise and secrete VLDL particles. This abnormality in hepatic FA metabolism involves defects in apolipoprotein B synthesis and low availability of apolipoproteins and lipids for VLDL packaging. Fatty liver in calves is also caused by milk containing either soybean oil (rich in n-6 PUFA), or coconut oil (rich in C12:0 and C14:0). The ability of muscle tissue to use FA as an energy source depends on its mitochondrial content and, hence, on many physiological factors. The uptake and partitioning of LCFA between oxidation and storage in muscle is regulated by the activity of key intracellular enzymes and binding proteins. One such protein, carnitine palmitoyltransferase I (CPT I) controls the transport of LCFA into mitochondria. Metabolites derived from LCFA inhibit glucose oxidation, decrease the activity of CPT I and decrease the efficiency of ATP production by mitochondria. Most research on tissue lipid metabolism in ruminants is focused on: i) the partitioning of FA oxidation between intracellular peroxisomes and mitochondria in the liver and in muscles; (ii) the regulation of lipid metabolism by leptin, a recently discovered hormone secreted by mature adipocytes; and iii) the effects of activation of the nuclear receptors (PPARs and RXR) by LCFA or by phytol metabolites derived from chlorophyll.
Notes:
 
PMID 
C Piot, J F Hocquette, J H Veerkamp, D Durand, D Bauchart (1999)  Effects of dietary coconut oil on fatty acid oxidation capacity of the liver, the heart and skeletal muscles in the preruminant calf.   Br J Nutr 82: 4. 299-308 Oct  
Abstract: The oxidative capacity of the liver, the heart and skeletal muscles for fatty acids were investigated in preruminant calves fed for 19 d on a milk-replacer containing either coconut oil (CO, rich in 12:0) or tallow (rich in 16:0 and 18:1). Weights of the total body and tissues did not differ significantly between the two groups of animals but plasma glucose and insulin concentrations were lower in the CO group. Feeding on the CO diet induced an 18-fold increase in the hepatic concentration of triacylglycerols. Rates of total and peroxisomal oxidation of [1-14C]laurate, [1-14C]palmitate and [1-14C]oleate were measured in fresh tissue homogenates. Higher rates of total oxidation in liver homogenate and of peroxisomal oxidation in liver, heart and rectus abdominis muscle homogenates were observed with laurate used as substrate. Furthermore, the relative contribution of peroxisomes to total oxidation was 1.9-fold higher in the liver and in the heart with laurate than with oleate or palmitate. Finally, the peroxisomal oxidation rate of oleate was 1.5-fold higher in the hearts of calves fed on the CO diet. Whatever the tissue, citrate synthase (CS, EC 4.1.3.7) and cytochrome c oxidase (COX, EC 1.9.3.1) activities were similar between the two groups of calves but the COX: CS activity ratio was lower in the liver of the CO group. In conclusion, laurate is better catabolized by peroxisomes than long-chain fatty acids, especially in the liver. Elongation of lauric acid after partial oxidation might explain the hepatic triacylglycerol accumulation in calves fed on the CO diet.
Notes:
1998
 
PMID 
M Bonnet, Y Faulconnier, J Fléchet, J F Hocquette, C Leroux, D Langin, P Martin, Y Chilliard (1998)  Messenger RNAs encoding lipoprotein lipase, fatty acid synthase and hormone-sensitive lipase in the adipose tissue of underfed-refed ewes and cows.   Reprod Nutr Dev 38: 3. 297-307 May/Jun  
Abstract: The mechanisms involved in the nutritional regulation of genes encoding lipogenic (lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and fatty acid synthase (FAS)) and lipolytic (hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL)) enzymes were investigated by comparing the levels of the corresponding mRNAs in the adipose tissue (AT) of underfed or underfed-refed ewes and cows. Refeeding sharply increased LPL and FAS activities (19-25- and 6-8-fold, respectively) and moderately increased (2-4 fold) the activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH), malic enzyme (ME) and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (G3PDH). Northern blot analysis revealed three LPL transcripts and a single FAS transcript in cow and ewe AT. A single HSL mRNA was detected in cow AT and two transcripts in ewe AT. Refeeding sharply increased LPL and FAS mRNA levels, while restriction slightly increased (cows) or had no effect (ewes) on the HSL mRNA levels. This suggests that nutritional factors regulate sharply the expression of LPL and FAS genes by pretranslational mechanisms, but less clearly that of HSL gene.
Notes:
 
PMID 
M Balage, D Larbaud, E Debras, J F Hocquette, J Grizard (1998)  Acute hyperinsulinemia fails to change GLUT-4 content in crude membranes from goat skeletal muscles and adipose tissue.   Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol 120: 3. 425-430 Jul  
Abstract: The effect of insulin on GLUT-4 protein level in samples of adipose tissue and skeletal muscles from goats was studied in vivo using an euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp. The clamp was maintained in conscious goats for 6 h in the presence of amino acids to prevent insulin-induced hypoaminoacidemia. GLUT-4 protein was assessed in crude membrane preparations from adipose tissue and four skeletal muscles (longissimus dorsi, tensor fasciae latae, anconeus and diaphragm) by Western blot analysis. No changes of GLUT-4 protein content were detected after 6 h of hyperinsulinemia in either adipose tissue or skeletal muscles from goats. These results suggest that insulin is not the prime factor involved in the short-term regulation of GLUT-4 protein transporter content in insulin-sensitive tissues from goats.
Notes:
 
PMID 
C Piot, J H Veerkamp, D Bauchart, J F Hocquette (1998)  Contribution of mitochondria and peroxisomes to palmitate oxidation in rat and bovine tissues.   Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol 121: 2. 185-194 Oct  
Abstract: Total and peroxisomal palmitate oxidation capacities and mitochondrial enzyme activities were compared in tissues from growing rats, preruminant calves and 15-month-old bulls. Total palmitate oxidation rates were 1.9-5.2-fold higher in rat than in bovine tissues and 1.7-fold higher in the heart and muscles from calves than from growing bulls. The peroxisomal contribution to palmitate oxidation was similar between rats and bovines (i.e. calves and bulls) in liver (35-51%), heart (26%) but not in muscles (14 +/- 3% in rats vs 33 +/- 4.5% in bovines, P < 0.05). Mitochondrial enzyme activities were 1.8-4.8-fold higher in rat than in bovine tissues but the citrate synthase to cytochrome-c oxidase ratio was the highest in the liver (17-38), intermediate in the heart and muscles from calves and rats (6-10) and the lowest in heart and muscles from bulls (2-3, P < 0.05). In all tissues and animal groups, palmitate oxidation rates were similar per unit cytochrome-c oxidase activity, but not always per unit citrate synthase activity. Therefore, differences in mitochondrial contents (as between rats and bovines) or in mitochondrial characteristics (as between liver and muscles) relate to the differences in palmitate oxidation capacity.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J F Hocquette, B Graulet, T Olivecrona (1998)  Lipoprotein lipase activity and mRNA levels in bovine tissues.   Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol 121: 2. 201-212 Oct  
Abstract: Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) in cattle has been extensively studied in adipose tissue, milk and mammary gland, but only to a limited extent in muscles. Therefore, we have adapted our in vitro LPL assay method for the measurement of LPL activity and describe, for the first time, sensitive procedures to quantify LPL activity and mRNA levels in bovine muscles. In vitro activation of bovine LPL activity is approximately 5-fold greater with rat than with bovine sera for heart and muscles, but not for adipose tissues. Values of LPL activity are in the upper range of those previously reported for rat or bovine tissues. With rat serum as activator, LPL activity in the heart of seven calves (662-832 mU g-1) is at least 3-fold lower than in the rat heart (2150-2950 mU g-1, P < 0.05). LPL activity is higher in bovine heart and oxidative muscles (412-972 mU g-1), except the diaphragm, than in mixed or glycolytic muscles (33-154 mU g-1, P < 0.05). The levels of LPL transcripts are positively related to LPL activity in bovine tissues, including muscles and adipose tissues.
Notes:
1997
 
PMID 
J F Hocquette, C Castiglia-Delavaud, B Graulet, P Ferré, B Picard, M Vermorel (1997)  Weaning marginally affects glucose transporter (GLUT4) expression in calf muscles and adipose tissues.   Br J Nutr 78: 2. 251-271 Aug  
Abstract: The nutritional regulation of glucose transporter GLUT4 was studied in eight muscles and four adipose tissues from two groups of preruminant (PR) or ruminant (R) calves of similar age (170 d), empty body weight (194 kg) at slaughter, and level of net energy intake from birth onwards. Isocitrate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.41) activity in muscles was not different between PR and R except in masseter muscle from the cheek (+71% in R; P < 0.003), which becomes almost constantly active at weaning for food chewing. Basal and maximally-insulin-stimulated glucose transport rate (GTR) per g tissue wet weight in rectus abdominis muscle were significantly higher in R calves (+31 and 41% respectively; P < 0.05). GLUT4 protein contents did not differ in muscles from PR and R except in masseter (+74% in R; P < 0.05) indicating that the increased GTR in rectus abdominis cannot be accounted for by an enhanced GLUT4 expression. GLUT4 mRNA levels did not differ between the two groups of animals in all muscles suggesting a regulation of GLUT4 at the protein level in masseter. GLUT4 number expressed on a per cell basis was lower in adipose tissue from R calves (-39%; P < 0.05) and higher in internal than in peripheral adipose tissues. In summary, the regulation of GLUT4 in calves at weaning differs markedly from that previously described in rodents (for review, see Girard et al. 1992). Furthermore, significant inter-individual variations were shown for metabolic activities in muscle and for biochemical variables in adipose tissue.
Notes:
1996
 
PMID 
J F Hocquette, B Graulet, C Castiglia-Delavaud, F Bornes, N Lepetit, P Ferre (1996)  Insulin-sensitive glucose transporter transcript levels in calf muscles assessed with a bovine GLUT4 cDNA fragment.   Int J Biochem Cell Biol 28: 7. 795-806 Jul  
Abstract: Previous studies have shown that the expression of the insulin-sensitive glucose transporter (GLUT4) is lower in oxidative muscles than in glycolytic muscles in bovines and goats in contrast to observations in rats. Additional experiments in this work provide very strong arguments that the immunoreactive band detected does represent GLUT4 protein, which further validates our previous results. Therefore, to determine the level of regulation, the main objective of the present study was to measure GLUT4 mRNA amounts in various bovine muscles. A 241-bp fragment of the bovine GLUT4 cDNA was cloned by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). It shares 80-90% sequence identity with related sequences in other species. This PCR-amplified bovine GLUT4 probe was used to determine the distribution of GLUT4 mRNA in bovine tissues in comparison with that of GLUT1 mRNA. Moreover, GLUT4 mRNA amounts were quantified by Northern-blot analysis in heart and seven skeletal muscles with various oxidative and glycolytic activities from seven ruminant calves. GLUT4 mRNA was detected by Northern-blot analysis only in calf insulin-sensitive tissues. In contrast, GLUT1 mRNA was detected in all tissues studied except liver. GLUT4 mRNA amount was the highest in masseter and heart, which are oxidative muscles (1.67 +/- 0.16 and 1.53 +/- 0.19 units/g wet tissue weight, respectively) and the lowest in glycolytic or oxido-glycolytic muscles (0.31 +/- 0.04 to 1.00 +/- 0.09 units/g wet tissue weight; SEM, n = 7). These data and our previous results provide evidence for translational and/or post-translational control mechanisms of bovine GLUT4 protein expression in a muscle type-specific manner.
Notes:
1995
 
PMID 
B Picard, H Gagnière, Y Geay, J F Hocquette, J Robelin (1995)  Study of the influence of age and weaning on the contractile and metabolic characteristics of bovine muscle.   Reprod Nutr Dev 35: 1. 71-84  
Abstract: Weaning is an interesting period for the study of the nutritional regulation of muscle energy metabolism, since during this stage the nature of the substrates supplied to the muscle and their energy balance are profoundly changed. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of these modifications on the contractile and metabolic characteristics of bovine muscle. Two similar groups of 7 male Montbéliard calves were used with the same age and weight, and with the same energy intake. One group consisted of milk-fed calves, the other of weaned animals. The latter were progressively weaned over a period between 107 and 128 d. The average age at slaughter in the 2 groups was 170 d. Biopsy specimens of semitendinosus (ST) muscle were taken at the ages of 66 d, 94 d (before the beginning of weaning) and 136 d (at the end of weaning) to follow the evolution of muscle characteristics. Samples of longissimus thoracis (LT) muscle were taken 24 h after slaughter and used to study the changes in protein and DNA content. The proportion and area of the different types of fiber, I (slow, oxidative), IIA (fast, oxido-glycolytic), IIB (fast, glycolytic) and IIC (fast/slow, oxidoglycolytic) were measured by immunohistochemistry and image analysis. The metabolism of the muscles was determined by studying isocitrate dehydrogenase (ICDH, oxidative) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH, glycolytic) activity. The results obtained between 2 and 6 months of life showed an overall increase in the area of the fibers (I, IIA, IIB and IIC) and a conversion of type IIA fibers into type IIB accompanied by a shift in the energy metabolism towards a glycolytic type. Weaning caused temporary stress, whose main consequences were to decrease overall muscle fiber area and the percentage of type IIB fibers, and increase the proportion of type IIC fibers in weaned animals. These effects may have been due to the nutritional and behavioral disturbances that accompany weaning, because 42 d after the end of weaning there was no difference in the size of ST and LT fibers between the 2 groups whereas the proportion of type IIA fibers was still higher in weaned animals.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J F Hocquette, F Bornes, M Balage, P Ferre, J Grizard, M Vermorel (1995)  Glucose-transporter (GLUT4) protein content in oxidative and glycolytic skeletal muscles from calf and goat.   Biochem J 305 ( Pt 2): 465-470 Jan  
Abstract: It is well accepted that skeletal muscle is a major glucose-utilizing tissue and that insulin is able to stimulate in vivo glucose utilization in ruminants as in monogastrics. In order to determine precisely how glucose uptake is controlled in various ruminant muscles, particularly by insulin, this study was designed to investigate in vitro glucose transport and insulin-regulatable glucose-transporter protein (GLUT4) in muscle from calf and goat. Our data demonstrate that glucose transport is the rate-limiting step for glucose uptake in bovine fibre strips, as in rat muscle. Insulin increases the rate of in vitro glucose transport in bovine muscle, but to a lower extent than in rat muscle. A GLUT4-like protein was detected by immunoblot assay in all insulin-responsive tissues from calf and goat (heart, skeletal muscle, adipose tissue) but not in liver, brain, erythrocytes and intestine. Unlike the rat, bovine and goat GLUT4 content is higher in glycolytic and oxido-glycolytic muscles than in oxidative muscles. In conclusion, using both a functional test (insulin stimulation of glucose transport) and an immunological approach, this study demonstrates that ruminant muscles express GLUT4 protein. Our data also suggest that, in ruminants, glucose is the main energy-yielding substrate for glycolytic but not for oxidative muscles, and that insulin responsiveness may be lower in oxidative than in other skeletal muscles.
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1992
 
PMID 
A Tar, J F Hocquette, J C Souberbielle, J P Clot, R Brauner, M C Postel-Vinay (1992)  Analysis of human growth hormone-binding protein in plasma by high pressure liquid chromatography   Orv Hetil 133: 9. 555-556 Mar  
Abstract: A technique using high pressure liquid chromatography gel filtration was used to evaluate GH-binding proteins (GH-BPs) in human plasma; eluate was monitored for radioactivity in a gamma-detection system connected to a computer. Plasma (200 microliters) was incubated with 125I-human (h) GH (200,000 cpm) at 4 degrees C for 20 hours. Our GH binding assay offers important gains in terms of rapidity and resolution; it has permitted a clear separation and characterization of the two GH-binding components present in human plasma.
Notes:
1991
 
PMID 
M C Postel-Vinay, A Tar, J F Hocquette, J P Clot, M Fontoura, R Brauner, R Rappaport (1991)  Human plasma growth hormone (GH)-binding proteins are regulated by GH and testosterone.   J Clin Endocrinol Metab 73: 1. 197-202 Jul  
Abstract: Possible regulation of GH-binding proteins (GH-BPs) in human plasma was examined. Eight children with isolated GH deficiency had a very low level of plasma GH-binding activity (10.2 +/- 1.1% of radioactivity). Under GH treatment the hormone binding to the high affinity BP (peak II-BP) increased in every patient to reach the mean value of 18.5 +/- 1.4%. In one patient, Scatchard plot analysis indicated that this increase was related to a higher binding capacity without any significant change in the binding affinity. A positive correlation existed between the GH-binding activity and insulin-like growth factor-I plasma levels. In nine boys with pubertal delay, the GH-specific binding to peak II-BP was normal (30.6 +/- 3.7% of radioactivity); it decreased significantly after testosterone treatment. In four boys with precocious puberty, the specific GH binding to peak II-BP was low (16.6 +/- 1.1%). It increased significantly to 21.6 +/- 1.1% of radioactivity after treatment with a LHRH analog. A negative correlation existed between plasma testosterone levels and GH binding to peak II-BP in boys presenting pubertal delay or precocious puberty. The high affinity GH-BP is regulated, and among the factors that play a role in this regulation, GH and testosterone have opposite effects.
Notes:
 
PMID 
M Fontoura, J F Hocquette, J P Clot, A Tar, R Brauner, R Rappaport, M C Postel-Vinay (1991)  Regulation of the growth hormone binding proteins in human plasma.   Acta Endocrinol (Copenh) 124 Suppl 2: 10-13  
Abstract: The plasma high affinity growth hormone binding protein corresponds to the extracellular binding domain of the liver membrane receptor. A distinct higher molecular weight protein, which binds GH with low affinity and high capacity, is present in the human plasma. In man, the biosynthesis and the exact functions of the GH binding proteins have to be clarified. The GH binding proteins are differently regulated; they are under a multihormonal control. The high affinity binding protein is low in neonates, increases after the first year of life, and reaches its highest value in young adult, without sex differences. GH is able to induce the high affinity binding protein, whereas sex steroids can decrease it. States of GH resistance, such as chronic renal failure, and certain idiopathic short statures, are associated with low levels of GH binding protein; in Laron-type dwarfism a defect of the GH receptor gene probably results in the absence of plasma GH binding activity. Recent findings on the regulation of the GH binding protein in man support a parallel regulation of liver membrane GH receptors and plasma binding protein.
Notes:
1990
 
PMID 
J F Hocquette, M C Postel-Vinay, J Djiane, A Tar, P A Kelly (1990)  Human liver growth hormone receptor and plasma binding protein: characterization and partial purification.   Endocrinology 127: 4. 1665-1672 Oct  
Abstract: The human liver GH receptor has been further characterized using several biochemical approaches. Crosslinking of [125 I]human GH (hGH) to microsomal receptors and to particulate and solubilized plasma membrane receptors, followed by gel electrophoresis and autoradiography, revealed two predominant receptor-hormone complexes with a mol wt of 124,000 and 75,000, respectively. As previously shown, the 70-80 k band appears to be generated from the 124 k band in the presence of beta-mercaptoethanol, suggesting intersubunit disulfide linkages. A minor complex of mol wt 150,000 was sometimes found. By immunoblot, using a polyclonal antibody raised against a synthetic peptide (residues 391-405 of the mature human GH receptor), a single band of 100 k was detected. Human liver GH receptor and plasma GH-binding protein (BP) were purified 1,000- and 4,000-fold, respectively. The partially purified membrane receptor, analyzed by ligand-blot, showed two major bands of 55 and 32 k and minor bands of 68 and 47 k. Crosslinking of the purified GH-BP or purified receptor with [125I]hGH revealed a 75 k receptor-hormone complex. Polyclonal antibodies raised against the hepatic GH receptor inhibited the binding of hGH to the human receptor and were able to immunoprecipitate the GH receptor and also the GH-BP complex. Our findings demonstrate the existence of multiple forms of the GH receptor in human liver (major components of 100 and 50-55 k, minor component of 130 k); they lend more support to the possible subunit structure of the GH receptor; and finally, they also suggest a close relationship, with common antigenic properties, of the membrane receptor and the plasma GH-BP.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Tar, J F Hocquette, J C Souberbielle, J P Clot, R Brauner, M C Postel-Vinay (1990)  Evaluation of the growth hormone-binding proteins in human plasma using high pressure liquid chromatography gel filtration.   J Clin Endocrinol Metab 71: 5. 1202-1207 Nov  
Abstract: A technique using high pressure liquid chromatography gel filtration was used to evaluate GH-binding proteins (BP) in human plasma; eluate was monitored for radioactivity in a gamma-detection system connected to a computer. Plasma (200 microL) was incubated with [125I]human (h) GH (200,000 cpm) at 4 C for 20 h. The main GH-BP (peak II) was well separated from free [125I]hGH (peak III) and from a higher mol wt complex (peak I), which was minor. In our control plasma, the specific binding of [125I]hGH to peak II BP (II-BP) was 32.2 +/- 0.6% of the radioactivity. Scatchard analyses indicate an association constant of 3.6-7.4 X 10(8) M-1 and a binding capacity ranging from 24-86 ng/mL for peak II-BP in five normal adult plasma samples. Peak I material, separated from plasma of boys with pubertal delay, bound hGH with a low affinity (3 x 10(6) M-1) and a very high capacity (2 micrograms/mL). In cross-linking experiments, peak I appeared as two proteins of 165 and 174 kD; these mol wt were much higher than that of peak II-BP, previously estimated at 53,000. hGH complexed to peak II-BP remained fully immunoreactive with use of the anti-hGH antibodies of our assay. In plasma containing 10-20 micrograms/L hGH, the proportion of bound hormone (peak II) was 44.5 +/- 2.3%, whereas the amount of hGH in peak I was very low or undetectable. Specific binding of hGH to II-BP was lowest during the first year of life and highest in adulthood. No sex difference was found. I-BP is differentially regulated, since its binding activity was significantly lower in adults than in prepubertal children. Normal values for age should be taken into account to interpret GH-binding activity, particularly in children 2 yr of age or younger. Our GH binding assay offers important gains in terms of rapidity and resolution; it has permitted a clear separation and characterization of the two GH-binding components present in human plasma.
Notes:
1989
 
PMID 
M C Postel-Vinay, R Girot, J Leger, J F Hocquette, P McKelvie, A Amar-Costesec, R Rappaport (1989)  No evidence for a defect in growth hormone binding to liver membranes in thalassemia major.   J Clin Endocrinol Metab 68: 1. 94-98 Jan  
Abstract: To test the hypothesis of a defect in GH-receptor interaction, which could explain the growth failure of thalassemic children, the binding of [125I]human (h) GH to membrane fractions prepared from liver biopsies was studied. Small amounts of liver were obtained from 6 girls and 11 boys with homozygous beta-thalassemia, aged 3-15 yr, all prepubertal, at the time of splenectomy. Specific binding of [125I]hGH ranged from 0.37-5.11% of the added radioactivity/100 micrograms liver membrane protein, with variations in both receptor number and binding affinity. This 14-fold variation in hGH binding to liver membranes of thalassemic children was comparable to that in membrane fractions of livers obtained from normal donors at the time of liver transplant. The binding of insulin to liver membranes from the thalassemic patients ranged from 9.8-17.9% of the added radioactivity/100 micrograms membrane protein and from 2.8-15.0%/100 micrograms membrane protein in the normal donors. Insulin and GH binding to liver membranes did not vary in a consistent way. A 3-fold difference was found in 5'-nucleotidase activity of the membrane fractions. Histological hepatic modifications were assessed with respect to siderosis and fibrosis. No correlation was found between these parameters and GH binding. These results suggest that possible membrane alterations are not the only reason for the variations in hGH binding. All patients had retarded growth, and all but 2 had low plasma insulin-like growth factor I levels. No relationship was found between the level of GH binding to liver membranes and the growth failure. Thus, a defect in GH binding to liver membranes is probably not the cause of the growth retardation of thalassemic children.
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PMID 
J F Hocquette, M C Postel-Vinay, C Kayser, B de Hemptinne, A Amar-Costesec (1989)  The human liver growth hormone receptor.   Endocrinology 125: 4. 2167-2174 Oct  
Abstract: Human livers, obtained from donors at the time of transplant, were homogenized in 0.25 M sucrose and fractionated by differential centrifugation. The specific binding of [125I] human (h) GH to total particulate fractions from 18 livers varied from 0.4-5.1% of the total radioactivity/100 micrograms protein. Binding affinity was 2.0 +/- 0.3 X 10(9) M-1, and binding capacity ranged from 14-53 fmol/mg protein. A different proportion of receptors occupied by endogenous hGH did not explain the large variation in binding. Binding sites were specific for hGH. Dissociation of the hormone-receptor complex was extremely slow. No specific binding of [125I]hPRL was observed. Specific binding of insulin was found in fractions from all livers and varied less than hGH binding. Cross-linking of [125I]hGH to plasma membrane and microsome receptors yielded two major autoradiographic bands corresponding to an estimated mol wt of 103,000 for the receptor, with a possible subunit of 54,000. Human liver primary fractions were characterized. The binding of hGH and insulin displayed a nucleo-microsomal distribution pattern in the primary fractions; 54.2% and 27.9% of the hGH-binding activity were found in the microsomes and the nuclear fraction, respectively, whereas insulin binds equally to nuclear and microsomal elements. Our findings suggest that hGH-binding sites are present in the plasma membrane and also in one or more intracellular compartments, whereas a high proportion of insulin receptors is associated with the plasma membrane.
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