Research Paper Volume 8, Issue 12 pp 3486—3497

Proteins that accumulate with age in human skeletal-muscle aggregates contribute to declines in muscle mass and function in Caenorhabditis elegans

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Figure 1. The protein content of muscle aggregates from older subjects was higher than that from young adults. Sarcosyl-insoluble aggregates were isolated from muscle of old (A) and young (B) donors (pooled, N=2 per group), dissolved in ampholyte buffer, resolved on 2D gels, and stained for total protein. Aggregates from 5 individuals per group were resuspended and heated to 95oC in Laemmli buffer (containing 2% SDS, w/v, and 0.5% ß-mercaptoethanol, v/v), and resolved on 1D gels to quantify total aggregate protein (C). Mean ±SD is shown after normalization to mean total aggregate protein for the young group.