HMG CoA reductase inhibitor-induced myotoxicity: pravastatin and lovastatin inhibit the geranylgeranylation of low-molecular-weight proteins in neonatal rat muscle …

OP Flint, BA Masters, RE Gregg, SK Durham - Toxicology and applied …, 1997 - Elsevier
OP Flint, BA Masters, RE Gregg, SK Durham
Toxicology and applied pharmacology, 1997Elsevier
In previous studies, inhibition of cholesterol synthesis by HMG CoA reductase inhibitors
(HMGRI) was associated with myotoxicity in cultures of neonatal rat skeletal myotubes, and
rhabdomyolysis in rats, rabbits, and humansin vivo. In vitromyotoxicity was directly related to
HMGRI-induced depletion of mevalonate, farnesol, and geranylgeraniol, since
supplementation with these intermediate metabolites abrogated the toxicity. Both farnesol
and geranylgeraniol are required for the posttranslational modification, or isoprenylation, of …
In previous studies, inhibition of cholesterol synthesis by HMG CoA reductase inhibitors (HMGRI) was associated with myotoxicity in cultures of neonatal rat skeletal myotubes, and rhabdomyolysis in rats, rabbits, and humansin vivo. In vitromyotoxicity was directly related to HMGRI-induced depletion of mevalonate, farnesol, and geranylgeraniol, since supplementation with these intermediate metabolites abrogated the toxicity. Both farnesol and geranylgeraniol are required for the posttranslational modification, or isoprenylation, of essential regulatory proteins in mammalian cells. The objective of the present study was to measure changes in protein isoprenylation in cultured neonatal rat skeletal muscle cells exposed for 24 hr to increasing concentrations of pravastatin or lovastatin. Proteins were labeled with [3H]mevalonate, [3H]farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP), or [3H]geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate (GGPP), and then separated by SDS–PAGE and quantitated by scintillation counting and densitometry of autoradiographs. Mevalonate and FPP labeling of the majority of proteins increased in a concentration-dependent manner, even at concentrations greater than 2 μmlovastatin and 25 μmpravastatin that completely inhibited cholesterol synthesis. In contrast, mevalonate and FPP labeling of three protein bands with molecular weights of 26.6, 27.7, and 28.9 kDa was markedly inhibited at concentrations higher than 1 μmlovastatin and 400 μmpravastatin, which inhibited protein synthesis and disrupted myotube morphology after longer exposures in a previous study. In contrast, these proteins were equally well labeled by GGPP at all HMGRI concentrations tested, suggesting that isoprenylation of the 26.9-, 27.8-, and 28.9-kDa proteins requires geranylgeraniol. The results of this study indicate that HMGRI-induced myotoxicity is most likely related to reduced posttranslational modification of specific regulatory proteins by geranylgeraniol.
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