BACKGROUND: Though muscle protein turnover rates have been well established, little is known regarding the turnover of other musculoskeletal tissues. Furthermore, their response to protein supplementation has not yet been assessed. OBJECTIVE: To assess skeletal muscle, bone, cartilage, tendon, ligament, meniscus, and periarticular soft tissue protein synthesis rates over a two-week period with or without additional protein supplementation in vivo in older adults. METHODS: O) was administered throughout the 14-day preoperative period, and all musculoskeletal tissues were collected during subsequent surgery to assess tissue protein synthesis rates. Data are presented as means±SD. RESULTS: Daily fractional protein synthesis rates (FSR) in muscle, synovium, and Hoffa's fat pad averaged 1.17±0.23, 0.79±0.46, and 0.53±0.29 %/d, respectively. Fibrous tissues, including anterior and posterior cruciate ligament, patellar tendon, lateral and medial meniscus, and femoral cartilage FSR averaged 0.45±0.27, 0.46±0.32, 0.20±0.10, 0.21±0.15, 0.18±0.14, and 0.19±0.11 %/d, respectively. Finally, FSR of bone obtained from the distal femur, notch, trochlea, tibia, and patella were 0.18±0.13, 0.21±0.14, 0.13±0.10, 0.12±0.05, and 0.16±0.10 %/d, respectively. FSR differed significantly between tissue groups (P-tissue group<0.001), with the highest FSR in muscle, followed by periarticular soft tissues, fibrous tissues, and bone (pairwise comparisons, all P<0.001). Musculoskeletal tissue FSR did not differ between the control and protein supplemented group (P-treatment=0.27, P-treatment*tissue type=0.14). CONCLUSIONS: Muscle, bone, cartilage, tendon, ligament, meniscus, and periarticular soft tissue protein synthesis rates range between 0.12 and 1.17 %/d in vivo in older adults. Two weeks of protein supplementation does not seem to increase daily musculoskeletal tissue turnover. This trial was registered at www. CLINICALTRIALS: gov as NCT03037294.
Houtvast et al. (Fri,) studied this question.