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Ribosome profiling analysis of human skeletal muscle identifies reduced translation of mitochondrial proteins with age

Ravi Tharakan, Ceereena Ubaida‐Mohien, Yulan Piao, Myriam Gorospe, Luigi Ferrucci

2021RNA Biology20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

With advancing age, human muscle loses strength and function, but the molecular causes of these losses are unknown. Skeletal muscle shows an age-dependent decline in the levels of different proteins, but whether such decline is associated with reduced translation has not been studied. To address this gap of knowledge, we used the technique of ribosome profiling to study translation in muscle from middle-aged and old individuals. Using ribosome occupancy as a measure of translation status, several mRNAs showed differential translation with age. Older age was associated with lower translation of myosin and titin isoforms and more broadly with the translation of proteins involved in oxidative phosphorylation encoded by the mitochondrial genome. Based on our findings, we propose that mitochondrial proteins are less translated in old skeletal muscle.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyRibosome profilingSkeletal muscleMyosinTranslation (biology)Five prime untranslated regionNebulinGene isoformCell biologyMitochondrial ribosomeRibosomeGeneticsTitinMessenger RNAGeneSarcomereAnatomyMyocyteRNAMitochondrial Function and PathologyRNA modifications and cancerRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms