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. 1987 Mar;42(2):168–172. doi: 10.1093/geronj/42.2.168

Age-related Changes in Rat Muscle Glycogen Synthase Activity

Elisabetta Dall'aglio 1, Helen Chang 1, Gerald M Reaven 1, Salman Azhar 1
PMCID: PMC7108525  PMID: 3102591

Abstract

This study was designed to evaluate effects of aging on glycogen synthase activity in rat skeletal muscle. Total enzyme activity was shown to be significantly, (p < .001) lower in tensor fascia latae, biceps femoris, and soleus muscle obtained from 24-month-old compared with 2-month-old rats. Similarly, values for the active form of enzyme were significantly lower, (p < .001) in all three muscle types of 24-month-old compared with 2-month-old rats. This age-related decline in glycogen synthase activity was not due to a reduction in the affinity of the enzyme for its activator (glucose-6-phosphate) and was independent of the concentration of substrate (UDP-glucose) in the assay system. Because similar age-related changes were seen when enzyme activity was expressed per milligram of muscle protein or per gram of muscle tissue, the fall in enzyme activity was not a simple function of an age-related decline in muscle mass. Glycogen levels also were reduced significantly in tensor fascia latae, biceps femoris, and soleus of 24-monthold rats compared with 2-month-old rats, p < .001. These results document an age-related change in a key enzyme regulating glycogen metabolism in muscle.


Articles from Journal of Gerontology are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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