The Journal of nutritional biochemistry | 2021

Effect of dietary L-theanine supplementation on skeletal muscle fiber type transformation in vivo.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of dietary L-theanine supplementation on skeletal muscle fiber type transition in mice. Our data indicated that dietary 0.15% L-theanine supplementation significantly increased the mRNA expression levels of muscle fiber type related genes (MyHC I, MyHC IIa, PGC-1α, Sirt1, Tnnt1, Tnnc1, Tnni1, MEF2C) and the protein expression levels of MyHC IIa, myoglobin, PGC-1α, Sirt1 and Troponin I-SS, but significantly decreased the mRNA and protein expression levels of MyHC IIb. Dietary 0.15% L-theanine supplementation significantly increased the activities of SDH and MDH and decreased the activity of LDH. Furthermore, immunofluorescence demonstrated that dietary 0.15% L-theanine supplementation significantly increased the percentage of type I fibers, and significantly decreased the percentage of type II fibers. In addition, we found that dietary 0.15% L-theanine supplementation increased the fatigue-resistant, antioxidant capacity, mitochondrial biogenesis and function in skeletal muscle of mice. Furthermore, dietary 0.15% L-theanine supplementation significantly increased the mRNA levels of prox1, CaN and NFATc1, the protein levels of prox1, CNA and NFATc1 and the activity of CaN in GAS muscle when compared with the control group. These results indicated that dietary L-theanine supplementation promoted skeletal muscle fiber transition from type II to type I, which might be via activation of CaN/NFATc1 signaling pathway.

Volume None
Pages \n 108859\n
DOI 10.1016/j.jnutbio.2021.108859
Language English
Journal The Journal of nutritional biochemistry

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