PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Sialylation and muscle performance: sialic acid is a marker of muscle ageing.

  • Frank Hanisch,
  • Wenke Weidemann,
  • Mona Großmann,
  • Pushpa Raj Joshi,
  • Hans-Jürgen Holzhausen,
  • Gisela Stoltenburg,
  • Joachim Weis,
  • Stephan Zierz,
  • Rüdiger Horstkorte

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080520
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
p. e80520

Abstract

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Sialic acids (Sia) are widely expressed as terminal monosaccharides on eukaryotic glycoconjugates. They are involved in many cellular functions, such as cell-cell interaction and signal recognition. The key enzyme of sialic acid biosynthesis is the bifunctional UDP-N-acetylglucosamine-2-epimerase/N-acetylmannosamine kinase (GNE), which catalyses the first two steps of Sia biosynthesis in the cytosol. In this study we analysed sialylation of muscles in wild type (C57Bl/6 GNE (+/+)) and heterozygous GNE-deficient (C57Bl/6 GNE (+/-)) mice. We measured a significantly lower performance in the initial weeks of a treadmill exercise in C57Bl/6 GNE (+/-) mice compared to wild type C57Bl/6 GNE (+/+) animals. Membrane bound Sia of C57Bl/6 GNE (+/-) mice were reduced by 33-53% at week 24 and by 12-15% at week 80 in comparison to C57Bl/6 GNE (+/+) mice. Interestingly, membrane bound Sia concentration increased with age of the mice by 16-46% in C57Bl/6 GNE (+/+), but by 87-207% in C57Bl/6 GNE (+/-). Furthermore we could identify specific morphological changes in aged muscles. Here we propose that increased Sia concentrations in muscles are a characteristic feature of ageing and could be used as a marker for age-related changes in muscle.