Milk-derived ribonuclease 5 preparations induce myogenic differentiation in vitro and muscle growth in vivo

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Abstract

Ribonuclease 5, also known as angiogenin, is a stable and abundant ribonuclease in milk whey protein, which is able to regulate several cellular functions, including capillary formation, neuron survival, and epithelial cell growth. Ribonuclease 5 is important for protein synthesis directly stimulating rRNA synthesis in the nucleolus. Here, we show that biologically active RNase5 can be purified from bovine milk. Furthermore, we show that milk-derived RNase5 directly stimulates muscle cell differentiation in vitro, inducing C2C12 cell differentiation and myogenesis. When supplemented into the diet of healthy adult mice, milk-derived RNase5 preparations promoted muscle weight gain and grip strength. Collectively, these data indicate that milk-derived RNase5 preparations exhibit a novel role in skeletal muscle cell function.

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Knight, M. I., Tester, A. M., McDonagh, M. B., Brown, A., Cottrell, J., Wang, J., … Cocks, B. G. (2014). Milk-derived ribonuclease 5 preparations induce myogenic differentiation in vitro and muscle growth in vivo. Journal of Dairy Science, 97(12), 7325–7333. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2014-7901

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