Characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine C2C12 muscle cells

Leucine is a branched-chain amino acid, which possesses a unique ability to stimulate the rate of protein synthesis in muscle cells both in vivo and in vitro. This thesis aimed to evaluate the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken and continuous murine muscle cells.This thesis elucidated th...

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Main Author: Elsaied, Nashwa
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/66042/
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author Elsaied, Nashwa
author_facet Elsaied, Nashwa
author_sort Elsaied, Nashwa
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Leucine is a branched-chain amino acid, which possesses a unique ability to stimulate the rate of protein synthesis in muscle cells both in vivo and in vitro. This thesis aimed to evaluate the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken and continuous murine muscle cells.This thesis elucidated the differences between satellite cells derived from chickens selected for high growth (broilers) and chickens with normal growth rate (layers). It also elucidates the differences that exist between satellite cells derived from selected (breast) and unselected (leg) muscles of the same bird. The results of this thesis suggest that leg deformities in modern broiler chickens could be due to poor proliferation and differentiation of leg muscle cells. They also suggest that leucine supplementation may provide added benefit in increasing the mass and strength of broilers leg muscles. This thesis has also shown the negative effects associated with serum restriction and emphasised the central role of serum in promoting the protein effects of leucine on cultured muscle cells. New insights into the concentration- and time-effects of leucine on C2C12 cells have been provided. In addition, this thesis elucidated how the combined effect of leucine and glutamine is both concentration- and time-dependent. Moreover, a possible involvement of signalling pathways, other than mTOR, in mediating the protein effects of leucine on muscle cells was detected. Finally, this thesis has been the first to test the temporal expression of myomiRs in cultured muscle cells following leucine treatment. It is hoped that these findings may ultimately contribute to the development of a nutritional strategy, using leucine, to increase muscle mass and subsequently improve the health and welfare of broiler chickens and mitigate muscle wasting in humans.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
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publishDate 2021
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spelling nottingham-660422025-02-28T15:13:04Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/66042/ Characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine C2C12 muscle cells Elsaied, Nashwa Leucine is a branched-chain amino acid, which possesses a unique ability to stimulate the rate of protein synthesis in muscle cells both in vivo and in vitro. This thesis aimed to evaluate the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken and continuous murine muscle cells.This thesis elucidated the differences between satellite cells derived from chickens selected for high growth (broilers) and chickens with normal growth rate (layers). It also elucidates the differences that exist between satellite cells derived from selected (breast) and unselected (leg) muscles of the same bird. The results of this thesis suggest that leg deformities in modern broiler chickens could be due to poor proliferation and differentiation of leg muscle cells. They also suggest that leucine supplementation may provide added benefit in increasing the mass and strength of broilers leg muscles. This thesis has also shown the negative effects associated with serum restriction and emphasised the central role of serum in promoting the protein effects of leucine on cultured muscle cells. New insights into the concentration- and time-effects of leucine on C2C12 cells have been provided. In addition, this thesis elucidated how the combined effect of leucine and glutamine is both concentration- and time-dependent. Moreover, a possible involvement of signalling pathways, other than mTOR, in mediating the protein effects of leucine on muscle cells was detected. Finally, this thesis has been the first to test the temporal expression of myomiRs in cultured muscle cells following leucine treatment. It is hoped that these findings may ultimately contribute to the development of a nutritional strategy, using leucine, to increase muscle mass and subsequently improve the health and welfare of broiler chickens and mitigate muscle wasting in humans. 2021-12-31 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/66042/1/Nashwa%20Anwar%20Elsaied.pdf Elsaied, Nashwa (2021) Characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine C2C12 muscle cells. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Leucine Branched chain amino acids muscle growth muscle cells
spellingShingle Leucine
Branched chain amino acids
muscle growth
muscle cells
Elsaied, Nashwa
Characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine C2C12 muscle cells
title Characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine C2C12 muscle cells
title_full Characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine C2C12 muscle cells
title_fullStr Characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine C2C12 muscle cells
title_full_unstemmed Characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine C2C12 muscle cells
title_short Characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine C2C12 muscle cells
title_sort characterisation of the anabolic effects of leucine on primary chicken muscle cells and murine c2c12 muscle cells
topic Leucine
Branched chain amino acids
muscle growth
muscle cells
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/66042/