Journal articles: 'Muscle fibers remodeling' – Grafiati (2024)

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Relevant bibliographies by topics / Muscle fibers remodeling / Journal articles

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Author: Grafiati

Published: 28 May 2022

Last updated: 29 May 2022

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1

Levine, Sanford, Taitan Nguyen, Michael Friscia, Jianliang Zhu, Wilson Szeto, JohnC.Kucharczuk, BorisA.Tikunov, NealA.Rubinstein, LarryR.Kaiser, and JosephB.Shrager. "Parasternal intercostal muscle remodeling in severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease." Journal of Applied Physiology 101, no.5 (November 2006): 1297–302. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.01607.2005.

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Studies in experimental animals indicate that chronic increases in neural drive to limb muscles elicit a fast-to-slow transformation of fiber-type proportions and myofibrillar proteins. Since neural drive to the parasternal intercostal muscles (parasternals) is chronically increased in patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (COPDs), we carried out the present study to test the hypothesis that the parasternals of COPD patients exhibit an increase in the proportions of both slow fibers and slow myosin heavy chains (MHCs). Accordingly, we obtained full thickness parasternal muscle biopsies from the third interspace of seven COPD patients (mean ± SE age: 59 ± 4 yr) and seven age-matched controls (AMCs). Fiber typing was done by immunohistochemistry, and MHC proportions were determined by SDS-PAGE followed by densitometry. COPD patients exhibited higher proportions of slow fibers than AMCs (73 ± 4 vs. 51 ± 3%; P < 0.01). Additionally, COPD patients exhibited higher proportions of slow MHC than AMCs (56 ± 4 vs. 46 ± 4%, P < 0.04). We conclude that the parasternal muscles of patients with severe COPD exhibit a fast-to-slow transformation in both fiber-type and MHC proportions. Previous workers have demonstrated that remodeling of the external intercostals, another rib cage inspiratory muscle, elicited by severe COPD is characterized by a slow-to-fast transformation in both fiber types and MHC isoform proportions. The physiological significance of this difference in remodeling between these two inspiratory rib cage muscles remains to be elucidated.

2

Mendias,ChristopherL., AndrewJ.Schwartz, JeremyA.Grekin, JonathanP.Gumucio, and KristofferB.Sugg. "Changes in muscle fiber contractility and extracellular matrix production during skeletal muscle hypertrophy." Journal of Applied Physiology 122, no.3 (March1, 2017): 571–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00719.2016.

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Skeletal muscle can adapt to increased mechanical loads by undergoing hypertrophy. Transient reductions in whole muscle force production have been reported during the onset of hypertrophy, but contractile changes in individual muscle fibers have not been previously studied. Additionally, the extracellular matrix (ECM) stores and transmits forces from muscle fibers to tendons and bones, and determining how the ECM changes during hypertrophy is important in understanding the adaptation of muscle tissue to mechanical loading. Using the synergist ablation model, we sought to measure changes in muscle fiber contractility, collagen content, and cross-linking, and in the expression of several genes and activation of signaling proteins that regulate critical components of myogenesis and ECM synthesis and remodeling during muscle hypertrophy. Tissues were harvested 3, 7, and 28 days after induction of hypertrophy, and nonoverloaded rats served as controls. Muscle fiber specific force (sFo), which is the maximum isometric force normalized to cross-sectional area, was reduced 3 and 7 days after the onset of mechanical overload, but returned to control levels by 28 days. Collagen abundance displayed a similar pattern of change. Nearly a quarter of the transcriptome changed over the course of overload, as well as the activation of signaling pathways related to hypertrophy and atrophy. Overall, this study provides insight into fundamental mechanisms of muscle and ECM growth, and indicates that although muscle fibers appear to have completed remodeling and regeneration 1 mo after synergist ablation, the ECM continues to be actively remodeling at this time point. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study utilized a rat synergist ablation model to integrate changes in single muscle fiber contractility, extracellular matrix composition, activation of important signaling pathways in muscle adaption, and corresponding changes in the muscle transcriptome to provide novel insight into the basic biological mechanisms of muscle fiber hypertrophy.

3

Hinterberger,T.J., and K.F.Barald. "Fusion between myoblasts and adult muscle fibers promotes remodeling of fibers into myotubes in vitro." Development 109, no.1 (May1, 1990): 139–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dev.109.1.139.

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Muscle satellite cells are residual embryonic myoblast precursors responsible for muscle growth and regeneration. In order to examine the role of satellite cells in the initial events of muscle regeneration, we placed individual mature rat muscle fibers in vitro along with their satellite cells. When the satellite cells were allowed to proliferate, they produced populations of myoblasts that fused together to form myotubes on the laminin substrate. These myoblasts and myotubes also fused with the adult fibers. When they did so, the fibers lost their adult morphology, and by 8 days in vitro, essentially all of them were remodeled into structures resembling embryonic myotubes. However, when proliferating satellite cells were eliminated by exposure to cytosine arabinoside (araC), the vast majority of fibers retained their adult shape. Addition of C2C12 cells (a myoblast line derived from adult mouse satellite cells) to araC-treated fiber cultures resulted in their fusion with the rat muscle fibers and restored the ability of the fibers to remodel, whereas addition of either a fibroblast cell line or a transformed, non-fusing variant of C2C12 cells, or addition of conditioned medium from C2C12 cells, failed to do so. These results imply that myoblast fusion is responsible for triggering adult fiber remodeling in vitro.

4

Shenkman,B.S. "From Slow to Fast: Hypogravity-Induced Remodeling of Muscle Fiber Myosin Phenotype." Acta Naturae 8, no.4 (December15, 2016): 47–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.32607/20758251-2016-8-4-47-59.

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Skeletal muscle consists of different fiber types arranged in a mosaic pattern. These fiber types are characterized by specific functional properties. Slow-type fibers demonstrate a high level of fatigue resistance and prolonged contraction duration, but decreased maximum contraction force and velocity. Fast-type fibers demonstrate a high contraction force and velocity, but profound fatigability. During the last decades, it has been discovered that all these properties are determined by the predominance of slow or fast myosin-heavy-chain (MyHC) isoforms. It was observed that gravitational unloading during space missions and simulated microgravity in ground-based experiments leads to the transformation of some slow-twitch muscle fibers into fast-twitch ones due to changes in the patterns of MyHC gene expression in the postural soleus muscle. The present review covers the facts and mechanistic speculations regarding myosin phenotype remodeling under conditions of gravitational unloading. The review considers the neuronal mechanisms of muscle fiber control and molecular mechanisms of regulation of myosin gene expression, such as inhibition of the calcineurin/NFATc1 signaling pathway, epigenomic changes, and the behavior of specific microRNAs. In the final portion of the review, we discuss the adaptive role of myosin phenotype transformations.

5

Farup, Jean, Stine Klejs Rahbek, Simon Riis, Mikkel Holm Vendelbo, Frank de Paoli, and Kristian Vissing. "Influence of exercise contraction mode and protein supplementation on human skeletal muscle satellite cell content and muscle fiber growth." Journal of Applied Physiology 117, no.8 (October15, 2014): 898–909. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00261.2014.

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Skeletal muscle satellite cells (SCs) are involved in remodeling and hypertrophy processes of skeletal muscle. However, little knowledge exists on extrinsic factors that influence the content of SCs in skeletal muscle. In a comparative human study, we investigated the muscle fiber type-specific association between emergence of satellite cells (SCs), muscle growth, and remodeling in response to 12 wk unilateral resistance training performed as eccentric (Ecc) or concentric (Conc) resistance training ± whey protein (Whey, 19.5 g protein + 19.5 g glucose) or placebo (Placebo, 39 g glucose) supplementation. Muscle biopsies (vastus lateralis) were analyzed for fiber type-specific SCs, myonuclei, and fiber cross-sectional area (CSA). Following training, SCs increased with Conc in both type I and type II fibers ( P < 0.01) and exhibited a group difference from Ecc ( P < 0.05), which did not increase. Myonuclei content in type I fibers increased in all groups ( P < 0.01), while a specific accretion of myonuclei in type II fibers was observed in the Whey-Conc ( P < 0.01) and Placebo-Ecc ( P < 0.01) groups. Similarly, whereas type I fiber CSA increased independently of intervention ( P < 0.001), type II fiber CSA increased exclusively with Whey-Conc ( P < 0.01) and type II fiber hypertrophy correlated with whole muscle hypertrophy exclusively following Conc training ( P < 0.01). In conclusion, isolated concentric knee extensor resistance training appears to constitute a stronger driver of SC content than eccentric resistance training while type II fiber hypertrophy was accentuated when combining concentric resistance training with whey protein supplementation.

6

Clanton,ThomasL., and Sanford Levine. "Respiratory muscle fiber remodeling in chronic hyperinflation: dysfunction or adaptation?" Journal of Applied Physiology 107, no.1 (July 2009): 324–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00173.2009.

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The diaphragm and other respiratory muscles undergo extensive remodeling in both animal models of emphysema and in human chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, but the nature of the remodeling is different in many respects. One common feature is a shift toward improved endurance characteristics and increased oxidative capacity. Furthermore, both animals and humans respond to chronic hyperinflation by diaphragm shortening. Although in rodent models this clearly arises by deletion of sarcomeres in series, the mechanism has not been proven conclusively in human chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Unique characteristics of the adaptation in human diaphragms include shifts to more predominant slow, type I fibers, expressing slower myosin heavy chain isoforms, and type I and type II fiber atrophy. Although some laboratories report reductions in specific force, this may be accounted for by decreases in myosin heavy chain content as the muscles become more oxidative and more efficient. More recent findings have reported reductions in Ca2+ sensitivity and reduced myofibrillar elastic recoil. In contrast, in rodent models of disease, there is no consistent evidence for loss of specific force, no consistent shift in fiber populations, and atrophy is predominantly seen only in fast, type IIX fibers. This review challenges the hypothesis that the adaptations in human diaphragm represent a form of dysfunction, secondary to systemic disease, and suggest that most findings can as well be attributed to adaptive processes of a complex muscle responding to unique alterations in its working environment.

7

Trappe, Scott, Nicholas Luden, Kiril Minchev, Ulrika Raue, Bozena Jemiolo, and ToddA.Trappe. "Skeletal muscle signature of a champion sprint runner." Journal of Applied Physiology 118, no.12 (June15, 2015): 1460–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00037.2015.

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We had the unique opportunity to study the skeletal muscle characteristics, at the single fiber level, of a world champion sprint runner who is the current indoor world record holder in the 60-m hurdles (7.30 s) and former world record holder in 110-m hurdles (12.91 s). Muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus lateralis at rest and 4 h after a high-intensity exercise challenge (4 × 7 repetitions of resistance exercise). Single muscle fiber analyses were conducted for fiber type distribution (myosin heavy chain, MHC), fiber size, contractile function (strength, speed, and power) and mRNA expression (before and after the exercise bout). The world-class sprinter's leg muscle had a high abundance (24%) of the pure MHC IIx muscle fibers with a total fast-twitch fiber population of 71%. Power output of the MHC IIx fibers (35.1 ± 1.4 W/l) was 2-fold higher than MHC IIa fibers (17.1 ± 0.5 W/l) and 14-fold greater than MHC I fibers (2.5 ± 0.1 W/l). Additionally, the MHC IIx fibers were highly responsive to intense exercise at the transcriptional level for genes involved with muscle growth and remodeling ( Fn14 and myostatin). To our knowledge, the abundance of pure MHC IIx muscle fibers is the highest observed in an elite sprinter. Further, the power output of the MHC IIa and MHC IIx muscle fibers was greater than any human values reported to date. These data provide a myocellular basis for the high level of sprinting success achieved by this individual.

8

Renzini, Alessandra, Carles Sánchez Riera, Isidora Minic, Chiara D’Ercole, Biliana Lozanoska-Ochser, Alessia Cedola, Giuseppe Gigli, Viviana Moresi, and Luca Madaro. "Metabolic Remodeling in Skeletal Muscle Atrophy as a Therapeutic Target." Metabolites 11, no.8 (August5, 2021): 517. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo11080517.

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Skeletal muscle is a highly responsive tissue, able to remodel its size and metabolism in response to external demand. Muscle fibers can vary from fast glycolytic to slow oxidative, and their frequency in a specific muscle is tightly regulated by fiber maturation, innervation, or external causes. Atrophic conditions, including aging, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and cancer-induced cachexia, differ in the causative factors and molecular signaling leading to muscle wasting; nevertheless, all of these conditions are characterized by metabolic remodeling, which contributes to the pathological progression of muscle atrophy. Here, we discuss how changes in muscle metabolism can be used as a therapeutic target and review the evidence in support of nutritional interventions and/or physical exercise as tools for counteracting muscle wasting in atrophic conditions.

9

Wüst,RobC.I., DavidS.Myers, Rachel Stones, David Benoist, PhilipA.Robinson, JohnP.Boyle, Chris Peers, Ed White, and HarryB.Rossiter. "Regional skeletal muscle remodeling and mitochondrial dysfunction in right ventricular heart failure." American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology 302, no.2 (January 2012): H402—H411. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00653.2011.

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Exercise intolerance is a cardinal symptom of right ventricular heart failure (RV HF) and skeletal muscle adaptations play a role in this limitation. We determined regional remodeling of muscle structure and mitochondrial function in a rat model of RV HF induced by monocrotaline injection (MCT; 60 mg·kg−1; n = 11). Serial sections of the plantaris were stained for fiber type, succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activity and capillaries. Mitochondrial function was assessed in permeabilized fibers using respirometry, and isolated complex activity by blue native gel electrophoresis (BN PAGE). All measurements were compared with saline-injected control animals (CON; n = 12). Overall fiber cross-sectional area was smaller in MCT than CON: 1,843 ± 114 vs. 2,322 ± 120 μm2 ( P = 0.009). Capillary-to-fiber ratio was lower in MCT in the oxidative plantaris region (1.65 ± 0.09 vs. 1.93 ± 0.07; P = 0.03), but not in the glycolytic region. SDH activity ( P = 0.048) and maximal respiratory rate ( P = 0.012) were each ∼15% lower in all fibers in MCT. ADP sensitivity was reduced in both skeletal muscle regions in MCT ( P = 0.032), but normalized by rotenone. A 20% lower complex I/IV activity in MCT was confirmed by BN PAGE. MCT-treatment was associated with lower mitochondrial volume density (lower SDH activity), quality (lower complex I activity), and fewer capillaries per fiber area in oxidative skeletal muscle. These features are consistent with structural and functional remodeling of the determinants of oxygen supply potential and utilization that may contribute to exercise intolerance and reduced quality of life in patients with RV HF.

10

Ito, Naoki, Yuko Miyagoe-Suzuki, Shin’ichi Takeda, and Akira Kudo. "Periostin Is Required for the Maintenance of Muscle Fibers during Muscle Regeneration." International Journal of Molecular Sciences 22, no.7 (March31, 2021): 3627. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22073627.

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Skeletal muscle regeneration is a well-organized process that requires remodeling of the extracellular matrix (ECM). In this study, we revealed the protective role of periostin, a matricellular protein that binds to several ECM proteins during muscle regeneration. In intact muscle, periostin was localized at the neuromuscular junction, muscle spindle, and myotendinous junction, which are connection sites between muscle fibers and nerves or tendons. During muscle regeneration, periostin exhibited robustly increased expression and localization at the interstitial space. Periostin-null mice showed decreased muscle weight due to the loss of muscle fibers during repeated muscle regeneration. Cultured muscle progenitor cells from periostin-null mice showed no deficiencies in their proliferation, differentiation, and the expression of Pax7, MyoD, and myogenin, suggesting that the loss of muscle fibers in periostin-null mice was not due to the impaired function of muscle stem/progenitor cells. Periostin-null mice displayed a decreased number of CD31-positive blood vessels during muscle regeneration, suggesting that the decreased nutritional supply from blood vessels was the cause of muscle fiber loss in periostin-null mice. These results highlight the novel role of periostin in maintaining muscle mass during muscle regeneration.

11

Chandra, Murali, MatthewL.Tschirgi, and JilC.Tardiff. "Increase in tension-dependent ATP consumption induced by cardiac troponin T mutation." American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology 289, no.5 (November 2005): H2112—H2119. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00571.2005.

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How different mutations in cardiac troponin T (cTnT) lead to distinct secondary downstream cellular remodeling in familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC) remains elusive. To explore the molecular basis for the distinct impact of different mutations in cTnT on cardiac myocytes, we studied mechanical activity of detergent-skinned muscle fiber bundles from different lines of transgenic (TG) mouse hearts that express wild-type cTnT (WTTG), R92W cTnT, R92L cTnT, and Delta-160 cTnT (deletion of amino acid 160). The amount of mutant cTnT is ∼50% of the total myocellular cTnT in both R92W and R92L TG mouse hearts and ∼35% in Delta-160 TG mouse hearts. Myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity was enhanced in all mutant cTnT TG cardiac muscle fibers. Compared with the WTTG fibers, Ca2+ sensitivity increased significantly at short sarcomere length (SL) of 1.9 μm ( P < 0.001) in R92W TG fibers by 2.2-fold, in R92L by 2.0-fold, and in Delta-160 by 1.3-fold. At long SL of 2.3 μm, Ca2+ sensitivity increased significantly ( P < 0.01) in a similar manner (R92W, 2.5-fold; R92L, 1.9-fold; Delta-160, 1.3-fold). Ca2+-activated maximal tension remained unaltered in all TG muscle fibers. However, tension-dependent ATP consumption increased significantly in Delta-160 TG muscle fibers at both short SL (23%, P < 0.005) and long SL (37%, P < 0.0001), suggesting a mutation-induced change in cross-bridge detachment rate constant. Chronic stresses on relative cellular ATP level in cardiac myocytes may cause a strain on energy-dependent Ca2+ homeostatic mechanisms. This may result in pathological remodeling that we observed in Delta-160 TG cardiac myocytes where the ratio of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase 2/phospholamban decreased significantly. Our results suggest that different types of stresses imposed on cardiac myocytes would trigger distinct cellular signaling, which leads to remodeling that may be unique to some mutants.

12

Lieber,R.L., M.C.Schmitz, D.K.Mishra, and J.Friden. "Contractile and cellular remodeling in rabbit skeletal muscle after cyclic eccentric contractions." Journal of Applied Physiology 77, no.4 (October1, 1994): 1926–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1994.77.4.1926.

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The time course of muscle contractile and cellular properties was studied in rabbit ankle flexor muscles after injury produced by eccentric exercise. Cyclic eccentric exercise was produced by increasing the tibiotarsal angle of the rabbit while activating the peroneal nerve by use of transcutaneous electrodes. Muscle properties were measured 1, 2, 3, 7, 14, and 28 days after exercise to define the time course of muscle changes after injury. A control group receiving only isometric contraction was used to study the effect of cyclic activation itself. The magnitude of the torque decline after 1 day was the same with use of isometric or eccentric exercise, but eccentric exercise resulted in a further decrease in torque after 2 days, at which time isometrically exercised muscles had fully recovered. The most prominent morphological changes in the injured muscle fibers were the loss of antibody staining for the desmin cytoskeletal protein and deposition of intracellular fibronectin, even when the injured muscle fibers retained their normal complement of contractile and enzymatic proteins. The presence of fibronectin inside the myofibers indicated a loss of cellular integrity. Invasion by inflammatory cells was apparent on the basis of localization of embryonic myosin. Thus eccentric exercise initiates a series of events that results in disruption of the cytoskeletal network and an inflammatory response that could be the mechanism for further deterioration of the contractile response.

13

Jakobsen,J.R., N.R.Jakobsen, A.L.Mackey, M.Koch, M.Kjaer, and M.R.Krogsgaard. "Remodeling of muscle fibers approaching the human myotendinous junction." Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports 28, no.8 (May8, 2018): 1859–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/sms.13196.

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14

Stuart,CharlesA., MichelleL.Lee, MarkA.South, MaryE.A.Howell, and MichaelH.Stone. "Muscle hypertrophy in prediabetic men after 16 wk of resistance training." Journal of Applied Physiology 123, no.4 (October1, 2017): 894–901. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00023.2017.

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Resistance training of healthy young men typically results in muscle hypertrophy and a shift in vastus lateralis composition away from type IIx fibers to an increase in IIa fiber content. Our previous studies of 8 wk of resistance training found that many metabolic syndrome men and women paradoxically increased IIx fibers with a decrease in IIa fibers. To confirm the hypothesis that obese subjects might have muscle remodeling after resistance training very different from healthy lean subjects, we subjected a group of nine obese male volunteers to progressive resistance training for a total of 16 wk. In these studies, weight loss was discouraged so that muscle changes would be attributed to the training alone. Detailed assessments included comparisons of histological examinations of needle biopsies of vastus lateralis muscle pretraining and at 8 and 16 wk. Prolonging the training from 8 to 16 wk resulted in increased strength, improved body composition, and more muscle fiber hypertrophy, but euglycemic clamp-quantified insulin responsiveness did not improve. Similar to prior studies, muscle fiber composition shifted toward more fast-twitch type IIx fibers (23 to 42%). Eight weeks of resistance training increased the muscle expression of phosphorylated Akt2 and mTOR. Muscle GLUT4 expression increased, although insulin receptor and IRS-1 expression did not change. We conclude that resistance training of prediabetic obese subjects is effective at changing muscle, resulting in fiber hypertrophy and increased type IIx fiber content, and these changes continue up to 16 wk of training.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Obese, insulin-resistant men responded to 16 wk of progressive resistance training with muscle hypertrophy and increased strength and a shift in muscle fiber composition toward fast-twitch, type IIx fibers. Activation of muscle mTOR was increased by 8 wk but did not increase further at 16 wk despite continued augmentation of peak power and rate of force generation.

15

Hardee,JustinP., MelissaJ.Puppa, DennisK.Fix, Song Gao, KimbellL.Hetzler, TedA.Bateman, and JamesA.Carson. "The effect of radiation dose on mouse skeletal muscle remodeling." Radiology and Oncology 48, no.3 (September1, 2014): 247–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/raon-2014-0025.

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AbstractBackground. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of two clinically relevant radiation doses on the susceptibility of mouse skeletal muscle to remodeling.Materials and methods. Alterations in muscle morphology and regulatory signaling were examined in tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius muscles after radiation doses that differed in total biological effective dose (BED). Female C57BL/6 (8-wk) mice were randomly assigned to non-irradiated control, four fractionated doses of 4 Gy (4x4 Gy; BED 37 Gy), or a single 16 Gy dose (16 Gy; BED 100 Gy). Mice were sacrificed 2 weeks after the initial radiation exposure.Results. The 16 Gy, but not 4x4 Gy, decreased total muscle protein and RNA content. Related to muscle regeneration, both 16 Gy and 4x4 Gy increased the incidence of central nuclei containing myofibers, but only 16 Gy increased the extracellular matrix volume. However, only 4x4 Gy increased muscle 4-hydroxynonenal expression. While both 16 Gy and 4x4 Gy decreased IIB myofiber mean cross-sectional area (CSA), only 16 Gy decreased IIA myofiber CSA. 16 Gy increased the incidence of small diameter IIA and IIB myofibers, while 4x4 Gy only increased the incidence of small diameter IIB myofibers. Both treatments decreased the frequency and CSA of low succinate dehydrogenase activity (SDH) fibers. Only 16 Gy increased the incidence of small diameter myofibers having high SDH activity. Neither treatment altered muscle signaling related to protein turnover or oxidative metabolism.Conclusions. Collectively, these results demonstrate that radiation dose differentially affects muscle remodeling, and these effects appear to be related to fiber type and oxidative metabolism.

16

Kasper,ChristineE. "Spatial Patterns of Atrophied Muscle Fibers during Exercised Recovery." Biological Research For Nursing 1, no.1 (July 1999): 38–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/109980049900100106.

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The effect of run training during the recovery period on the spatial distributions of fiber type was examined in atrophic soleus muscle of adult rats following 28 days of hindlimb suspension. During recovery, clusters of damaged and type IIC fibers were observed, which were more pronounced in the exercised animals than in both exercised and nonexercised control groups. The results indicate that exercise during recovery following suspension-induced hindlimb muscle atrophy produces changes in the soleus fiber-type cross-sectional area, both absolute and relative. These changes were not seen in the sedentary recovery group or in control rats exposed to the same exercise regimen. The author concludes that this treatment, unlike neurogenic pathologies, does not cause any remodeling during recovery, in the sense of changed adjacency relations among fiber types.

17

Laughlin,M.Harold. "Physical activity-induced remodeling of vasculature in skeletal muscle: role in treatment of type 2 diabetes." Journal of Applied Physiology 120, no.1 (January1, 2016): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00789.2015.

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This manuscript summarizes and discusses adaptations of skeletal muscle vasculature induced by physical activity and applies this understanding to benefits of exercise in prevention and treatment of type 2 diabetes (T2D). Arteriolar trees of skeletal muscle are heterogeneous. Exercise training increases capillary exchange and blood flow capacities. The distribution of vascular adaptation to different types of exercise training are influenced by muscle fiber type composition and fiber recruitment patterns that produce different modes of exercise. Thus training-induced adaptations in vascular structure and vascular control in skeletal muscle are not hom*ogeneously distributed throughout skeletal muscle or along the arteriolar tree within a muscle. Results summarized indicate that similar principles apply to vascular adaptation in skeletal muscle in T2D. It is concluded that exercise training-induced changes in vascular gene expression differ along the arteriolar tree and by skeletal muscle fiber type composition. Results suggest that it is unlikely that hemodynamic forces are the only exercise-induced signals mediating the regulation of vascular gene expression. In patients with T2D, exercise training is perhaps the most effective treatment of the many related symptoms. Training-induced changes in the vasculature and in insulin signaling in the muscle fibers and vasculature augment glucose and insulin delivery as well as glucose uptake. If these adaptations occur in a sufficient amount of muscle mass, exposure to hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia will decrease along with the risk of microvascular complications throughout the body. It is postulated that exercise sessions in programs of sufficient duration, that engage as much skeletal muscle mass as possible, and that recruit as many muscle fibers within each muscle as possible will produce the greatest benefit. The added benefit of combined resistance and aerobic training programs and of high-intensity exercise programs is not simply “more exercise is better”.

18

Fajardo,ValA., BradleyA.Rietze, PaigeJ.Chambers, Catherine Bellissimo, Eric Bombardier, Joe Quadrilatero, and A.RussellTupling. "Effects of sarcolipin deletion on skeletal muscle adaptive responses to functional overload and unload." American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 313, no.2 (August1, 2017): C154—C161. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00291.2016.

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Overexpression of sarcolipin (SLN), a regulator of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPases (SERCAs), stimulates calcineurin signaling to enhance skeletal muscle oxidative capacity. Some studies have shown that calcineurin may also control skeletal muscle mass and remodeling in response to functional overload and unload stimuli by increasing myofiber size and the proportion of slow fibers. To examine whether SLN might mediate these adaptive responses, we performed soleus and gastrocnemius tenotomy in wild-type (WT) and Sln-null ( Sln−/−) mice and examined the overloaded plantaris and unloaded/tenotomized soleus muscles. In the WT overloaded plantaris, we observed ectopic expression of SLN, myofiber hypertrophy, increased fiber number, and a fast-to-slow fiber type shift, which were associated with increased calcineurin signaling (NFAT dephosphorylation and increased stabilin-2 protein content) and reduced SERCA activity. In the WT tenotomized soleus, we observed a 14-fold increase in SLN protein, myofiber atrophy, decreased fiber number, and a slow-to-fast fiber type shift, which were also associated with increased calcineurin signaling and reduced SERCA activity. Genetic deletion of Sln altered these physiological outcomes, with the overloaded plantaris myofibers failing to grow in size and number, and transition towards the slow fiber type, while the unloaded soleus muscles exhibited greater reductions in fiber size and number, and an accelerated slow-to-fast fiber type shift. In both the Sln−/− overloaded and unloaded muscles, these findings were associated with elevated SERCA activity and blunted calcineurin signaling. Thus, SLN plays an important role in adaptive muscle remodeling potentially through calcineurin stimulation, which could have important implications for other muscle diseases and conditions.

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Allen,D.L., J.K.Linderman, R.R.Roy, A.J.Bigbee, R.E.Grindeland, V.Mukku, and V.R.Edgerton. "Apoptosis: a mechanism contributing to remodeling of skeletal muscle in response to hindlimb unweighting." American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 273, no.2 (August1, 1997): C579—C587. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.1997.273.2.c579.

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The role of apoptosis in the elimination of myonuclei during hindlimb unloading-induced atrophy and the inhibition of apoptosis in the prevention of muscle atrophy were examined. The number of nuclei demonstrating double-stranded DNA fragmentation seen by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TDT) histochemical staining, an indicator of apoptosis, was significantly increased after 14 days of suspension. Double staining with TDT and antilaminin immunohistochemistry revealed that some TDT-positive nuclei were within the fiber lamina and were most likely myonuclei. The number of fibers containing morphologically abnormal nuclei was also significantly greater in suspended compared with control rats. Combined treatment with growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor I (GH/ IGF-I) and resistance exercise attenuated the increase in TDT-positive nuclei (approximately 26%, P > 0.05) and significantly decreased the number of fibers with morphologically abnormal nuclei. The data suggest that 1) “programmed nuclear death” contributes to the elimination of myonuclei and/or satellite cells from atrophying fibers, and 2) GH/IGF-I administration plus muscle loading ameliorates the apoptosis associated with hindlimb unloading.

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Farkas,G.A., L.E.Gosselin, W.Z.Zhan, E.H.Schlenker, and G.C.Sieck. "Histochemical and mechanical properties of diaphragm muscle in morbidly obese Zucker rats." Journal of Applied Physiology 77, no.5 (November1, 1994): 2250–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1994.77.5.2250.

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The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effects of chronic mass loading produced by obesity on the structural and functional characteristics of the diaphragm in lean and obese Zucker rats. The trapezius muscle served as an internal control. The studies were carried out on 17 lean (303 +/- 24 g) and 16 obese (698 +/- 79 g) Zucker rats. We observed that the diaphragms from obese animals were restructured such that the overall contribution of type I and IIa fibers was significantly increased. As a consequence of this remodeling, overall diaphragm thickness was selectively greater in obese animals. In small isolated diaphragm bundles studied in vitro, we also detected a reduction in specific force in obese animals that was not detected in the trapezius muscle. In vitro fatigue resistance, assessed by repeated stimulation, was similar in muscles of lean and obese animals. Diaphragm fiber oxidative capacity (succinate dehydrogenase activity) was also comparable in lean and obese animals. We conclude that in obesity the diaphragm undergoes modest remodeling that may be beneficial in enhancing force generation.

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Sieck,GaryC., and Michael Regnier. "Invited Review: Plasticity and energetic demands of contraction in skeletal and cardiac muscle." Journal of Applied Physiology 90, no.3 (March1, 2001): 1158–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jappl.2001.90.3.1158.

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Numerous studies have explored the energetic properties of skeletal and cardiac muscle fibers. In this mini-review, we specifically explore the interactions between actin and myosin during cross-bridge cycling and provide a conceptual framework for the chemomechanical transduction that drives muscle fiber energetic demands. Because the myosin heavy chain (MHC) is the site of ATP hydrolysis and actin binding, we focus on the mechanical and energetic properties of different MHC isoforms. Based on the conceptual framework that is provided, we discuss possible sites where muscle remodeling may impact the energetic demands of contraction in skeletal and cardiac muscle.

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Milewska, Marta, and Katarzyna Grzelkowska-Kowalczyk. "Role of proinflammatory cytokines and growth factors in skeletal muscle regeneration." Medycyna Weterynaryjna 72, no.8 (2016): 472–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.21521/mw.5551.

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Skeletal muscle healing after injury can be divided into three distinct but overlapping phases. The destruction phase is characterized by rupture followed by necrosis of muscle fibers, formation of hematoma and inflammatory reaction. During the repair phase a necrotic tissue is phagocyted by macrophages, muscle fibers are regenerating and connective tissue scars are formed. The remodeling phase concerns the period when regenerating muscle fibers mature, scar contraction and reorganization occurs and the muscle recovers its functional efficiency. Proinflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α) and growth factors (FGF, IGF, TGF-β, HGF) play a critical role in all phases of muscle repair. Moreover, chemokines expressed at early stages of myogenesis can regulate the survival and proliferation of myoblasts. Chemokines expressed in vivo in muscle cells can directly influence myogenesis, but can also act in a paracrine manner by recruiting the immune cells (macrophages) to injured skeletal muscles, which is crucial for the regeneration process. Identification of molecules regulating myogenesis, like cytokines, chemokines and growth factors, contributes to the exploration of molecular mechanisms that can improve muscle regeneration after injury, diseases, surgery and increase the effectiveness of cell transplantation.

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Miller,ToddA., LisaA.Lesniewski, JudyM.Muller-Delp, AlanaK.Majors, Deb Scalise, and MichaelD.Delp. "Hindlimb unloading induces a collagen isoform shift in the soleus muscle of the rat." American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology 281, no.5 (November1, 2001): R1710—R1717. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.2001.281.5.r1710.

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To determine whether hindlimb unloading (HU) alters the extracellular matrix of skeletal muscle, male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to 0 ( n = 11), 1 ( n= 11), 14 ( n = 13), or 28 ( n = 11) days of unloading. Remodeling of the soleus and plantaris muscles was examined biochemically for collagen abundance via measurement of hydroxyproline, and the percentage of cross-sectional area of collagen was determined histologically with picrosirius red staining. Total hydroxyproline content in the soleus and plantaris muscles was unaltered by HU at any time point. However, the relative proportions of type I collagen in the soleus muscle decreased relative to control (Con) with 14 and 28 days HU (Con 68 ± 5%; 14 days HU 53 ± 4%; 28 days HU 53 ± 7%). Correspondingly, type III collagen increased in soleus muscle with 14 and 28 days HU (Con 32 ± 5%; 14 days HU 47 ± 4%; 28 days HU 48 ± 7%). The proportion of type I muscle fibers in soleus muscle was diminished with HU (Con 96 ± 2%; 14 days HU 86 ± 1%; 28 days HU 83 ± 1%), and the proportion of hybrid type I/IIB fibers increased (Con 0%; 14 days HU 8 ± 2%; 28 days HU 14 ± 2%). HU had no effect on the proportion of type I and III collagen or muscle fiber composition in plantaris muscle. The data demonstrate that HU induces a shift in the relative proportion of collagen isoform (type I to III) in the antigravity soleus muscle, which occurs concomitantly with a slow-to-fast myofiber transformation.

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Yang, Yifan, Bozena Jemiolo, and Scott Trappe. "Proteolytic mRNA expression in response to acute resistance exercise in human single skeletal muscle fibers." Journal of Applied Physiology 101, no.5 (November 2006): 1442–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00438.2006.

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The purpose of this study was to characterize changes in mRNA expression of select proteolytic markers in human slow-twitch [myosin heavy chain (MHC) I] and fast-twitch (MHC IIa) single skeletal muscle fibers following a bout of resistance exercise (RE). Muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus lateralis of eight young healthy sedentary men [23 ± 2 yr (mean ± SD), 93 ± 17 kg, 183 ± 6 cm] before and 4 and 24 h after 3 × 10 repetitions of bilateral knee extensions at 65% of one repetition maximum. The mRNA levels of TNF-α, calpains 1 and 2, muscle RING (really interesting novel gene) finger-1 (MuRF-1), atrogin-1, caspase-3, B-cell leukemia/lymphoma (Bcl)-2, and Bcl-2-associated X protein (Bax) were quantified using real-time RT-PCR. Generally, MHC I fibers had higher (1.6- to 5.0-fold, P < 0.05) mRNA expression pre- and post-RE. One exception was a higher (1.6- to 3.9-fold, P < 0.05) Bax-to-Bcl-2 mRNA ratio in MHC IIa fibers pre- and post-RE. RE increased (1.4- to 4.8-fold, P < 0.05) MuRF-1 and caspase-3 mRNA levels 4–24 h post-RE in both fiber types, whereas Bax-to-Bcl-2 mRNA ratio increased 2.2-fold ( P < 0.05) at 4 h post-RE only in MHC I fibers. These results suggest that MHC I fibers have a greater proteolytic mRNA expression pre- and post-RE compared with MHC IIa fibers. The greatest mRNA induction following RE was in MuRF-1 and caspase-3 in both fiber types. This altered and specific proteolytic mRNA expression among slow- and fast-twitch muscle fibers indicates that the ubiquitin/proteasomal and caspase pathways may play an important role in muscle remodeling with RE.

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Vilchinskaya, Natalia, Igor Krivoi, and Boris Shenkman. "AMP-Activated Protein Kinase as a Key Trigger for the Disuse-Induced Skeletal Muscle Remodeling." International Journal of Molecular Sciences 19, no.11 (November12, 2018): 3558. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms19113558.

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Molecular mechanisms that trigger disuse-induced postural muscle atrophy as well as myosin phenotype transformations are poorly studied. This review will summarize the impact of 5′ adenosine monophosphate -activated protein kinase (AMPK) activity on mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1)-signaling, nuclear-cytoplasmic traffic of class IIa histone deacetylases (HDAC), and myosin heavy chain gene expression in mammalian postural muscles (mainly, soleus muscle) under disuse conditions, i.e., withdrawal of weight-bearing from ankle extensors. Based on the current literature and the authors’ own experimental data, the present review points out that AMPK plays a key role in the regulation of signaling pathways that determine metabolic, structural, and functional alternations in skeletal muscle fibers under disuse.

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Singh,MariaA.Fiatarone, Wenjing Ding, ThomasJ.Manfredi, GuidoS.Solares, EvelynF.O’Neill, KarenM.Clements, NancyD.Ryan, JosephJ.Kehayias, RogerA.Fielding, and WilliamJ.Evans. "Insulin-like growth factor I in skeletal muscle after weight-lifting exercise in frail elders." American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism 277, no.1 (July1, 1999): E135—E143. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.1999.277.1.e135.

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To assess muscle remodeling and functional adaptation to exercise and diet interventions, 26 men and women aged 72–98 yr underwent a vastus lateralis biopsy before and after placebo control condition, and progressive resistance training, multinutrient supplementation, or both. Type II atrophy, Z band, and myofibril damage were present at baseline. Combined weight lifting and nutritional supplementation increased strength by 257 ± 62% ( P = 0.0001) and type II fiber area by 10.1 ± 9.0% ( P = 0.033), with a similar trend for type I fiber area (+12.8 ± 22.2%). Exercise was associated with a 2.5-fold increase in neonatal myosin staining ( P = 0.0009) and an increase of 491 ± 137% ( P < 0.0001) in IGF-I staining. Ultrastructural damage increased by 141 ± 59% after exercise training ( P = 0.034). Strength increases were largest in those with the greatest increases in myosin, IGF-I, damage, and caloric intake during the trial. Age-related sarcopenia appears largely confined to type II muscle fibers. Frail elders respond robustly to resistance training with musculoskeletal remodeling, and significant increases in muscle area are possible with resistance training in combination with adequate energy intakes.

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Prokic, Ivana, BelindaS.Cowling, Candice Kutchukian, Christine Kretz, Hichem Tasfaout, Vincent Gache, Josiane Hergueux, et al. "Differential physiological roles for BIN1 isoforms in skeletal muscle development, function and regeneration." Disease Models & Mechanisms 13, no.11 (September29, 2020): dmm044354. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dmm.044354.

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ABSTRACTSkeletal muscle development and regeneration are tightly regulated processes. How the intracellular organization of muscle fibers is achieved during these steps is unclear. Here, we focus on the cellular and physiological roles of amphiphysin 2 (BIN1), a membrane remodeling protein mutated in both congenital and adult centronuclear myopathies (CNM), that is ubiquitously expressed and has skeletal muscle-specific isoforms. We created and characterized constitutive muscle-specific and inducible Bin1 hom*ozygous and heterozygous knockout mice targeting either ubiquitous or muscle-specific isoforms. Constitutive Bin1-deficient mice died at birth from lack of feeding due to a skeletal muscle defect. T-tubules and other organelles were misplaced and altered, supporting a general early role for BIN1 in intracellular organization, in addition to membrane remodeling. Although restricted deletion of Bin1 in unchallenged adult muscles had no impact, the forced switch from the muscle-specific isoforms to the ubiquitous isoforms through deletion of the in-frame muscle-specific exon delayed muscle regeneration. Thus, ubiquitous BIN1 function is necessary for muscle development and function, whereas its muscle-specific isoforms fine tune muscle regeneration in adulthood, supporting that BIN1 CNM with congenital onset are due to developmental defects, whereas later onset may be due to regeneration defects.

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Dufresne,SébastienS., NicolasA.Dumont, Antoine Boulanger-Piette, ValA.Fajardo, Daniel Gamu, Sandrine-Aurélie Kake-Guena, Rares Ovidiu David, et al. "Muscle RANK is a key regulator of Ca2+ storage, SERCA activity, and function of fast-twitch skeletal muscles." American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 310, no.8 (April15, 2016): C663—C672. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00285.2015.

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Receptor-activator of nuclear factor-κB (RANK), its ligand RANKL, and the soluble decoy receptor osteoprotegerin are the key regulators of osteoclast differentiation and bone remodeling. Here we show that RANK is also expressed in fully differentiated myotubes and skeletal muscle. Muscle RANK deletion has inotropic effects in denervated, but not in sham, extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles preventing the loss of maximum specific force while promoting muscle atrophy, fatigability, and increased proportion of fast-twitch fibers. In denervated EDL muscles, RANK deletion markedly increased stromal interaction molecule 1 content, a Ca2+ sensor, and altered activity of the sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA) modulating Ca2+ storage. Muscle RANK deletion had no significant effects on the sham or denervated slow-twitch soleus muscles. These data identify a novel role for RANK as a key regulator of Ca2+ storage and SERCA activity, ultimately affecting denervated skeletal muscle function.

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Zampieri, Sandra, Simone Mosole, Stefan Löfler, Hannah Fruhmann, Samantha Burggraf, Ján Cvečka, Dušan Hamar, et al. "Physical exercise in Aging: Nine weeks of leg press or electrical stimulation training in 70 years old sedentary elderly people." European Journal of Translational Myology 25, no.4 (August25, 2015): 237. http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/ejtm.2015.5374.

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Sarcopenia is the age-related loss of muscle mass and function, reducing force generation and mobility in the elderlies. Contributing factors include a severe decrease in both myofiber size and number as well as a decrease in the number of motor neurons innervating muscle fibers (mainly of fast type) which is sometimes accompanied by reinnervation of surviving slow type motor neurons (motor unit remodeling). Reduced mobility and functional limitations characterizing aging can promote a more sedentary lifestyle for older individuals, leading to a vicious circle further worsening muscle performance and the patients' quality of life, predisposing them to an increased risk of disability, and mortality. Several longitudinal studies have shown that regular exercise may extend life expectancy and reduce morbidity in aging people. Based on these findings, the Interreg IVa project aimed to recruit sedentary seniors with a normal life style and to train them for 9 weeks with either leg press (LP) exercise or electrical stimulation (ES). Before and at the end of both training periods, all the subjects were submitted to mobility functional tests and muscle biopsies from the Vastus Lateralis muscles of both legs. No signs of muscle damage and/or of inflammation were observed in muscle biopsies after the training. Functional tests showed that both LP and ES induced improvements of force and mobility of the trained subjects. Morphometrical and immunofluorescent analyses performed on muscle biopsies showed that ES significantly increased the size of fast type muscle fibers (p&lt;0.001), together with a significant increase in the number of Pax7 and NCAM positive satellite cells (p&lt;0.005). A significant decrease of slow type fiber diameter was observed in both ES and LP trained subjects (p&lt;0.001). Altogether these results demonstrate the effectiveness of physical exercise either voluntary (LP) or passive (ES) to improve the functional performances of aging muscles. Here ES is demonstrated to be a safe home-based method to counteract fast type fiber atrophy, typically associated with aging skeletal muscle.

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Slivka, Dustin, Ulrika Raue, Chris Hollon, Kiril Minchev, and Scott Trappe. "Single muscle fiber adaptations to resistance training in old (>80 yr) men: evidence for limited skeletal muscle plasticity." American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology 295, no.1 (July 2008): R273—R280. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00093.2008.

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The purpose of this study was to investigate whole muscle and single muscle fiber adaptations in very old men in response to progressive resistance training (PRT). Six healthy independently living old men (82 ± 1 yr; range 80–86 yr, 74 ± 4 kg) resistance-trained the knee extensors (3 sets, 10 repetitions) at ∼70% one repetition maximum 3 days/wk for 12 wk. Whole thigh muscle cross-sectional area (CSA) was assessed before and after PRT using computed tomography (CT). Muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus lateralis before and after the PRT program. Isolated myosin heavy chain (MHC) I and IIa single muscle fibers ( n = 267; 142 pre; 125 post) were studied for diameter, peak tension, shortening velocity, and power. An additional set of isolated single muscle fibers ( n = 2,215; 1,202 pre; 1,013 post) was used to identify MHC distribution. One repetition maximum knee extensor strength increased ( P < 0.05) 23 ± 4 kg (56 ± 4 to 79 ± 7 kg; 41%). Muscle CSA increased ( P < 0.05) 3 ± 1 cm2 (120 ± 7 to 123 ± 7 cm2; 2.5%). Single muscle fiber contractile function and MHC distribution were unaltered with PRT. These data indicate limited muscle plasticity at the single-muscle fiber level with a resistance-training program among the very old. The minor increases in whole muscle CSA coupled with the static nature of the myocellular profile indicate that the strength gains were primarily neurological. These data contrast typical muscle responses to resistance training in young (∼20 yr) and old (∼70 yr) humans and indicate that the physiological regulation of muscle remodeling is adversely modified in the oldest old.

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McClung,JosephM., KristenA.Mehl, RaymondW.Thompson, LarryL.Lowe, and JamesA.Carson. "Nandrolone decanoate modulates cell cycle regulation in functionally overloaded rat soleus muscle." American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology 288, no.6 (June 2005): R1543—R1552. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00285.2004.

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Functionally overloading rat soleus muscle by synergist ablation induces a rapid increase in mass. Muscle remodeling during the first week of overload is critical for the overload-induced growth. Anabolic steroid modulation of this overload-induced remodeling response is not well understood. The purpose of this study was to determine whether pretreatment with nandrolone decanoate, a clinically administered anabolic steroid, alters muscle morphology and gene expression related to muscle growth during the initiation of functional overload in the rat soleus muscle. Adult (5 mo) male Fisher 344 × Brown Norway rats were randomly assigned to control (Sham), 3-day functional overload (OV), nandrolone decanoate administration (ND), or 3-day functional overload with nandrolone decanoate administration (OV+ND) treatment groups. Morphologically, OV increased the percentage of small (361%) and large (150%) fibers and expanded the ECM 50%. ND administration decreased the 3-day OV induction of small fibers 51% and nuclei associated with the ECM 20%. ND administration also attenuated the induction of cell cycle regulator p21 (64%) and myogenin (37%) mRNAs after 3 days of overload. These data demonstrate that nandrolone decanoate pretreatment can alter morphological and cell cycle regulator expression related to muscle growth at the onset of functional overload.

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Ferry, Arnaud, Mélanie Schuh, Ara Parlakian, Takouhie Mgrditchian, Nicolas Valnaud, Pierre Joanne, Gillian Butler-Browne, Onnik Agbulut, and Daniel Metzger. "Myofiber Androgen Receptor Promotes Maximal Mechanical Overload-Induced Muscle Hypertrophy and Fiber Type Transition in Male Mice." Endocrinology 155, no.12 (December1, 2014): 4739–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/en.2014-1195.

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The first aim of this study was to examine the role of myofiber androgen receptor (AR) in male mice on muscle performance gain and remodeling-induced muscle mechanical overloading (OVL) that mimics resistance training. The response of OVL in mice in which AR is selectively ablated in myofibers (ARskm−/y) was compared with that of wild-type (WT) mice. In addition, we determined whether the synthetic anabolic androgen nandrolone administration affects the OVL response. We found that OVL increased absolute maximal force and fatigue resistance in both mouse genotypes (P &lt; .05). However, the absolute maximal force increased more in ARskm−/y mice as compared with WT mice (+88% vs +63%) (P &lt; .05). Muscle weight increased less in response to OVL in ARskm−/y mice (+54%) than in WT mice (+115%) (P &lt; .05). The fiber number per cross-section similarly increased in both mouse genotypes after OVL (P &lt; .05). In contrast to WT mice, the diameter of the fibers expressing myosin heavy chain (MHC)-2x decreased after OVL in ARskm−/y mice (P &lt; .05). The MHC-2b to MHC-2a fiber type transition in response to OVL was reduced in ARskm−/y mice as compared with WT mice (P &lt; .05). Finally, nandrolone administration during OVL did not further improve absolute maximal force and fatigue resistance and markedly alter muscle remodeling in both mouse genotypes. Together, our results indicate that myofiber AR is required for a complete response to OVL and that exogenous androgens do not increase muscle performance during intensive remodeling in male mice.

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Takeda, Norifumi, and Ichiro Manabe. "Cellular Interplay between Cardiomyocytes and Nonmyocytes in Cardiac Remodeling." International Journal of Inflammation 2011 (2011): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.4061/2011/535241.

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Cardiac hypertrophy entails complex structural remodeling involving rearrangement of muscle fibers, interstitial fibrosis, accumulation of extracellular matrix, and angiogenesis. Many of the processes underlying cardiac remodeling have features in common with chronic inflammatory processes. During these processes, nonmyocytes, such as endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and immune cells, residing in or infiltrating into the myocardial interstitium play active roles. This paper mainly addresses the functional roles of nonmyocytes during cardiac remodeling. In particular, we focus on the communication between cardiomyocytes and nonmyocytes through direct cell-cell interactions and autocrine/paracrine-mediated pathways.

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Kivelä, Riikka, Heikki Kyröläinen, Harri Selänne, PaavoV.Komi, Heikki Kainulainen, and Veikko Vihko. "A single bout of exercise with high mechanical loading induces the expression of Cyr61/CCN1 and CTGF/CCN2 in human skeletal muscle." Journal of Applied Physiology 103, no.4 (October 2007): 1395–401. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00531.2007.

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High mechanical loading was hypothesized to induce the expression of angiogenic and/or lymphangiogenic extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins in skeletal muscle. Eight men performed a strenuous exercise protocol, which consisted of 100 unilateral maximal drop jumps followed by submaximal jumping until exhaustion. Muscle biopsies were taken 30 min and 48 h postexercise from the vastus lateralis muscle and analyzed for the following parameters: mRNA and protein expression of ECM-associated CCN proteins [cysteine-rich angiogenic protein 61 (Cyr61)/CCN1, connective tissue growth factor (CTGF)/CCN2], and mRNA expression of vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGFs) and hypoxia-inducible factor-1α. The mRNA expression of Cyr61 and CTGF increased 30 min after the exercise (14- and 2.5-fold, respectively; P < 0.001). Cyr61 remained elevated 48 h postexercise (threefold; P < 0.05). The mRNA levels of VEGF-A, VEGF-B, VEGF-C, VEGF-D, or hypoxia-inducible factor-1α did not change significantly at either 30 min or 48 h postexercise; however, the variation between subjects increased markedly in VEGF-A and VEGF-B mRNA. Cyr61 protein levels were higher at both 30 min and 48 h after the exercise compared with the control ( P < 0.05). Cyr61 and CTGF proteins were localized to muscle fibers and the surrounding ECM by immunohistochemistry. Fast fibers stained more intensively than slow fibers. In conclusion, mechanical loading induces rapid expression of CCN proteins in human skeletal muscle. This may be one of the early mechanisms involved in skeletal muscle remodeling after exercise, since Cyr61 and CTGF regulate the expression of genes involved in angiogenesis and ECM remodeling.

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O'Neill,DavidE.T., F.KrisAubrey, DavidA.Zeldin, RobinN.Michel, and EarlG.Noble. "Slower skeletal muscle phenotypes are critical for constitutive expression of Hsp70 in overloaded rat plantaris muscle." Journal of Applied Physiology 100, no.3 (March 2006): 981–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00831.2005.

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Heat shock protein 72 (Hsp70) is constitutively expressed in rat hindlimb muscles, reportedly in proportion to their content of type I myosin heavy chain. This distribution pattern has been suggested to result from the higher recruitment and activity of such muscles and/or a specific relationship between myosin phenotype and Hsp70 content. To differentiate between these possibilities, the fiber-specific distribution of Hsp70 was examined in male Sprague-Dawley rat plantaris under control conditions, following a fast-to-slow phenotypic shift in response to surgically induced overload (O) and in response to O when the phenotypic shift was prevented by 3,5,3′-triiodo-dl-thyronine administration. Constitutive expression of Hsp70 was restricted to type I and IIa fibers in plantaris from control rats, and this fiber-specific pattern of expression was maintained following O of up to 28 days, although Hsp70 content in the O muscle doubled. When O (for 40 days) of the plantaris was combined with 3,5,3′-triiodo-dl-thyronine administration, despite typical hypertrophy in the overloaded plantaris, prevention of the normal phenotypic transformation also blocked the increased expression of Hsp70 observed in euthyroid controls. Collectively, these data suggest that chronic changes in constitutive expression of Hsp70 with altered contractile activity appear critically dependent on fast-to-slow phenotypic remodeling.

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Marcucci, Lorenzo, and Carlo Reggiani. "Increase of resting muscle stiffness, a less considered component of age-related skeletal muscle impairment." European Journal of Translational Myology 30, no.2 (June17, 2020): 223–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/ejtm.2020.8982.

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Elderly people perform more slowly movements of everyday life as rising from a chair, walking, and climbing stairs. This is in the first place due to the loss of muscle contractile force which is even more pronounced than the loss of muscle mass. In addition, a secondary, but not negligible, component is the rigidity or increased stiffness which requires greater effort to produce the same movement and limits the range of motion of the joints. In this short review, we discuss the possible determinants of the limitations of joint mobility in healthy elderly, starting with the age-dependent alterations of the articular structure and focusing on the increased stiffness of the skeletal muscles. Thereafter, the possible mechanisms of the increased stiffness of the muscle-tendon complex are considered, among them changes in the muscle fibers, alterations of the connective components (extracellular matrix or ECM, aponeurosis, fascia and tendon) and remodeling of the neural pattern of muscle activation with increased of antagonist co-activation.

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Azab, Azab. "Skeletal Muscles: Insight into Embryonic Development, Satellite Cells, Histology, Ultrastructure, Innervation, Contraction and Relaxation, Causes, Pathophysiology, and Treatment of Volumetric Muscle I." Biotechnology and Bioprocessing 2, no.4 (May28, 2021): 01–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.31579/2766-2314/038.

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Background: Skeletal muscles are attached to bone and are responsible for the axial and appendicular movement of the skeleton and for maintenance of body position and posture. Objectives: The present review aimed to high light on embryonic development of skeletal muscles, histological and ultrastructure, innervation, contraction and relaxation, causes, pathophysiology, and treatment of volumetric muscle injury. The heterogeneity of the muscle fibers is the base of the flexibility which allows the same muscle to be used for various tasks from continuous low-intensity activity, to repeated submaximal contractions, and to fast and strong maximal contractions. The formation of skeletal muscle begins during the fourth week of embryonic development as specialized mesodermal cells, termed myoblasts. As growth of the muscle fibers continues, aggregation into bundles occurs, and by birth, myoblast activity has ceased. Satellite cells (SCs), have single nuclei and act as regenerative cells. Satellite cells are the resident stem cells of skeletal muscle; they are considered to be self-renewing and serve to generate a population of differentiation-competent myoblasts that will participate as needed in muscle growth, repair, and regeneration. Based on various structural and functional characteristics, skeletal muscle fibres are classified into three types: Type I fibres, Type II-B fibres, and type II-A fibres. Skeletal muscle fibres vary in colour depending on their content of myoglobin. Each myofibril exhibits a repeating pattern of cross-striations which is a product of the highly ordered arrangement of the contractile proteins within it. The parallel myofibrils are arranged with their cross-striations in the register, giving rise to the regular striations seen with light microscopy in longitudinal sections of skeletal muscle. Each skeletal muscle receives at least two types of nerve fibers: motor and sensory. Striated muscles and myotendinous junctions contain sensory receptors that are encapsulated proprioceptors. The process of contraction, usually triggered by neural impulses, obeys the all-or-none law. During muscle contraction, the thin filaments slide past the thick filaments, as proposed by Huxley's sliding filament theory. In response to a muscle injury, SCs are activated and start to proliferate; at this stage, they are often referred to as either myogenic precursor cells (MPC) or myoblasts. In vitro, evidence has been presented that satellite cells can be pushed towards the adipogenic and osteogenic lineages, but contamination of such cultures from non-myogenic cells is sometimes hard to dismiss as the underlying cause of this observed multipotency. There are, however, other populations of progenitors isolated from skeletal muscle, including endothelial cells and muscle-derived stem cells (MDSCs), blood-vessel-associated mesoangioblasts, muscle side-population cells, CD133+ve cells, myoendothelial cells, and pericytes. Volumetric muscle loss (VML) is defined as the traumatic or surgical loss of skeletal muscle with resultant functional impairment. It represents a challenging clinical problem for both military and civilian medicine. VML results in severe cosmetic deformities and debilitating functional loss. In response to damage, skeletal muscle goes through a well-defined series of events including; degeneration (1 to 3days), inflammation, and regeneration (3 to 4 weeks), fibrosis, and extracellular matrix remodeling (3 to 6 months).. Mammalian skeletal muscle has an impressive ability to regenerate itself in response to injury. During muscle tissue repair following damage, the degree of damage and the interactions between muscle and the infiltrating inflammatory cells appear to affect the successful outcome of the muscle repair process. The transplantation of stem cells into aberrant or injured tissue has long been a central goal of regenerative medicine and tissue engineering. Conclusion: It can be concluded that the formation of skeletal muscle begins during the fourth week of embryonic development as specialized mesodermal cells, termed myoblasts, by birth myoblast activity has ceased. Satellite cells are considered to be self-renewing, and serve to generate a population of differentiation-competent myoblasts. Skeletal muscle fibres are classified into three types. The process of contraction, usually triggered by neural impulses, obeys the all-or-none law. VML results in severe cosmetic deformities and debilitating functional loss. Mammalian skeletal muscle has an impressive ability to regenerate itself in response to injury. The transplantation of stem cells into aberrant or injured tissue has long been a central goal of regenerative medicine and tissue engineering.

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Mitchell,ToddW., Nigel Turner, A.J.Hulbert, PaulL.Else, JohnA.Hawley, Jong Sam Lee, ClintonR.Bruce, and StephenJ.Blanksby. "Exercise alters the profile of phospholipid molecular species in rat skeletal muscle." Journal of Applied Physiology 97, no.5 (November 2004): 1823–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00344.2004.

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We have determined the effect of two exercise-training intensities on the phospholipid profile of both glycolytic and oxidative muscle fibers of female Sprague-Dawley rats using electrospray-ionization mass spectrometry. Animals were randomly divided into three training groups: control, which performed no exercise training; low-intensity (8 m/min) treadmill running; or high-intensity (28 m/min) treadmill running. All exercise-trained rats ran 1,000 m/session for 4 days/wk for 4 wk and were killed 48 h after the last training bout. Exercise training was found to produce no novel phospholipid species but was associated with significant alterations in the relative abundance of a number of phospholipid molecular species. These changes were more prominent in glycolytic (white vastus lateralis) than in oxidative (red vastus lateralis) muscle fibers. The largest observed change was a decrease of ∼20% in the abundance of 1-stearoyl-2-docosahexaenoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine [PE(18:0/22:6); P < 0.001] ions in both the low- and high-intensity training regimes in glycolytic fibers. Increases in the abundance of 1-oleoyl-2-linoleoyl phopshatidic acid [PA(18:1/18:2); P < 0.001] and 1-alkenylpalmitoyl-2-linoleoyl phosphatidylethanolamine [plasmenyl PE (16:0/18:2); P < 0.005] ions were also observed for both training regimes in glycolytic fibers. We conclude that exercise training results in a remodeling of phospholipids in rat skeletal muscle. Even though little is known about the physiological or pathophysiological role of specific phospholipid molecular species in skeletal muscle, it is likely that this remodeling will have an impact on a range of cellular functions.

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Novotová, Marta, Michaela Pavlovičová, VladimirI.Veksler, Renée Ventura-Clapier, and Ivan Zahradník. "Ultrastructural remodeling of fast skeletal muscle fibers induced by invalidation of creatine kinase." American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 291, no.6 (December 2006): C1279—C1285. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00114.2006.

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Understanding muscle adaptation to various stimuli is difficult because of the complex nature of stimuli and responses. In particular, responses to perturbations in energy metabolism require careful examination, because they may involve both structural and functional elements. To estimate the structural component of the myocyte adaptation to energetic deficiency, we used transgenic mice with blocked expression of mitochondrial and cytosolic creatine kinases (CK). The ultrastructure was analyzed using the stereological method of vertical sections applied to electron microscopic images of ultrathin longitudinal sections of fast muscle fibers of gastrocnemius, known to adapt to CK deficiency by increasing oxidative metabolism. The lack of CK induced a profound structural adaptation response that included changes in the volume and surface densities of major organelles. In addition, using a new stereological parameter, the environment of an organelle, substantial changes in the mitochondrial neighborhood were identified pointing to their relocation closer to the major sites of energy consumption, supposedly to compensate for invalidated energy transfer. Using quantitative arguments, we have shown for the first time that spatial relations among organelles of muscle cells undergo adaptation in response to nonstructural stimuli like metabolic deficiency.

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Petrov,AlexeyM., ViolettaV.Kravtsova, VladimirV.Matchkov, AlexanderN.Vasiliev, AndreyL.Zefirov, AlexanderV.Chibalin, JudithA.Heiny, and IgorI.Krivoi. "Membrane lipid rafts are disturbed in the response of rat skeletal muscle to short-term disuse." American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 312, no.5 (May1, 2017): C627—C637. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00365.2016.

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Marked loss of skeletal muscle mass occurs under various conditions of disuse, but the molecular and cellular mechanisms leading to atrophy are not completely understood. We investigate early molecular events that might play a role in skeletal muscle remodeling during mechanical unloading (disuse). The effects of acute (6–12 h) hindlimb suspension on the soleus muscles from adult rats were examined. The integrity of plasma membrane lipid rafts was tested utilizing cholera toxin B subunit or fluorescent sterols. In addition, resting intracellular Ca2+ level was analyzed. Acute disuse disturbed the plasma membrane lipid-ordered phase throughout the sarcolemma and was more pronounced in junctional membrane regions. Ouabain (1 µM), which specifically inhibits the Na-K-ATPase α2 isozyme in rodent skeletal muscles, produced similar lipid raft changes in control muscles but was ineffective in suspended muscles, which showed an initial loss of α2 Na-K-ATPase activity. Lipid rafts were able to recover with cholesterol supplementation, suggesting that disturbance results from cholesterol loss. Repetitive nerve stimulation also restores lipid rafts, specifically in the junctional sarcolemma region. Disuse locally lowered the resting intracellular Ca2+ concentration only near the neuromuscular junction of muscle fibers. Our results provide evidence to suggest that the ordering of lipid rafts strongly depends on motor nerve input and may involve interactions with the α2 Na-K-ATPase. Lipid raft disturbance, accompanied by intracellular Ca2+ dysregulation, is among the earliest remodeling events induced by skeletal muscle disuse.

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Hyatt,HaydenW., and ScottK.Powers. "The Role of Calpains in Skeletal Muscle Remodeling with Exercise and Inactivity-induced Atrophy." International Journal of Sports Medicine 41, no.14 (July17, 2020): 994–1008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1199-7662.

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AbstractCalpains are cysteine proteases expressed in skeletal muscle fibers and other cells. Although calpain was first reported to act as a kinase activating factor in skeletal muscle, the consensus is now that calpains play a canonical role in protein turnover. However, recent evidence reveals new and exciting roles for calpains in skeletal muscle. This review will discuss the functions of calpains in skeletal muscle remodeling in response to both exercise and inactivity-induced muscle atrophy. Calpains participate in protein turnover and muscle remodeling by selectively cleaving target proteins and creating fragmented proteins that can be further degraded by other proteolytic systems. Nonetheless, an often overlooked function of calpains is that calpain-mediated cleavage of proteins can result in fragmented proteins that are biologically active and have the potential to actively influence cell signaling. In this manner, calpains function beyond their roles in protein turnover and influence downstream signaling effects. This review will highlight both the canonical and noncanonical roles that calpains play in skeletal muscle remodeling including sarcomere transformation, membrane repair, triad junction formation, regulation of excitation-contraction coupling, protein turnover, cell signaling, and mitochondrial function. We conclude with a discussion of key unanswered questions regarding the roles that calpains play in skeletal muscle.

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Huey,KimberlyA. "Regulation of HSP25 expression and phosphorylation in functionally overloaded rat plantaris and soleus muscles." Journal of Applied Physiology 100, no.2 (February 2006): 451–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.01022.2005.

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Functional overload (FO) is a powerful inducer of muscle hypertrophy and both oxidative and mechanical stress in muscle fibers. Heat shock protein 25 (HSP25) may protect against both of these stressors, and its expression can be regulated by changes in muscle loading and activation. The primary purpose of the present study was to test the hypothesis that chronic FO increases HSP25 expression and phosphorylation (pHSP25) in hypertrophying rat hindlimb muscle. HSP25 and pHSP25 levels were quantified in soluble and insoluble fractions of the soleus and plantaris to determine whether 3 or 7 days of FO increase translocation of HSP25 and/or pHSP25 to the insoluble fraction. p38 protein and phosphorylation (p-p38) was measured to determine its association with changes in pHSP25. HSP25 mRNA showed time-dependent increases in both the soleus and plantaris with FO. Three or seven days of FO increased HSP25 and pHSP25 in the soluble fraction in both muscles, with a greater response in the plantaris. In the insoluble fraction, HSP25 was increased after 3 or 7 days in both muscles, whereas pHSP25 was only increased in the 7-day plantaris. p38 and p-p38 increased in the plantaris at both time points. In the soleus, p-p38 only increased after 7 days. These results show that FO is associated with changes in HSP25 expression and phosphorylation and suggest its role in the remodeling that occurs during muscle hypertrophy. Increases in HSP25 in the insoluble fraction suggest that it may help to stabilize actin and/or other cytoskeletal proteins during the stress of muscle remodeling.

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Kolyada,AlexeyY., KathleenN.Riley, and IraM.Herman. "Rho GTPase signaling modulates cell shape and contractile phenotype in an isoactin-specific manner." American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 285, no.5 (November 2003): C1116—C1121. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00177.2003.

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Rho family small GTPases (Rho, Rac, and Cdc42) play an important role in cell motility, adhesion, and cell division by signaling reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. Here, we report an isoactin-specific, Rho GTPase-dependent signaling cascade in cells simultaneously expressing smooth muscle and nonmuscle actin isoforms. We transfected primary cultures of microvascular pericytes, cells related to vascular smooth muscle cells, with various Rho-related and Rho-specific expression plasmids. Overexpression of dominant positive Rho resulted in the formation of nonmuscle actin-containing stress fibers. At the same time, α-vascular smooth muscle actin (αVSMactin) containing stress fibers were disassembled, resulting in a dramatic reduction in cell size. Rho activation also yielded a disassembly of smooth muscle myosin and nonmuscle myosin from stress fibers. Overexpression of wild-type Rho had similar but less dramatic effects. In contrast, dominant negative Rho and C3 exotransferase or dominant positive Rac and Cdc42 expression failed to alter the actin cytoskeleton in an isoform-specific manner. The loss of smooth muscle contractile protein isoforms in pericyte stress fibers, together with a concomitant decrease in cell size, suggests that Rho activation influences “contractile” phenotype in an isoactin-specific manner. This, in turn, should yield significant alteration in microvascular remodeling during developmental and pathologic angiogenesis.

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Fahim,M.A., M.Y.Hasan, and W.B.Alshuaib. "Early morphological remodeling of neuromuscular junction in a murine model of diabetes." Journal of Applied Physiology 89, no.6 (December1, 2000): 2235–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jappl.2000.89.6.2235.

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Although skeletal muscle weakness is documented in diabetes, the time course for its development is not established. The present study examined the dorsiflexor muscle from animals that had been diabetic for 2 wk. Adult male c57BL mice were injected once with streptozotocin (STZ) to induce diabetes (60 mg/kg ip). Two weeks later, resting membrane potential and miniature end-plate potentials were recorded, and electron microscopy was utilized for ultrastructural evaluations. After STZ-induced diabetes, both resting membrane potential and miniature end-plate potentials were reduced. Nerve terminals showed less synaptic vesicles and had degenerated mitochondria. Furthermore, in the intramuscular nerves, disorganization of microtubules and neurofilaments was evidenced. Myelin-like figures were present in intramuscular nerves, neuromuscular junctions, and muscle fibers. At the muscle level, mitochondria were swollen, with disorganization of their cristae, disruption of T tubules, and myofibers with more deposition of glycogen granules. The present results revealed early STZ-induced nerve and muscle alterations. Observed ultrastructural modifications resemble those of motoneuron disorders and aging processes. These changes are possibly related to alterations in Ca2+ mobilization across muscle membrane. Other mechanisms such as free radical-mediated actions may also be implicated in STZ-induced effects on skeletal muscle.

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Anderson,J.E., A.Cunha, and M.F.Docker. "Novel “omega muscle units” in superficial body-wall myotomes during metamorphosis in the northern brook lamprey (Ichthyomyzon fossor)." Canadian Journal of Zoology 97, no.12 (December 2019): 1218–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/cjz-2019-0051.

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Lampreys transform from sedentary filter feeders to more mobile adults through a dramatic metamorphosis that includes remodeling of head muscle and skeletal systems. Metamorphic modifications of body-wall myotomes that could support changes in swimming behavior from larvae to adults have not been previously reported. Thus, transverse sections of northern brook lamprey (Ichthyomyzon fossor Reighard and Cummins, 1916) in larval (n = 4), metamorphosing (n = 3), and adult (n = 2) stages were used to investigate the architecture of body-wall muscle and to detect whether Pax7 and MyoD, proteins important in myogenesis, were co-localized in any muscle nuclei. In addition to myotomal complexity of muscle units composed of parietal and central fibers, there was a novel pattern of omega-shaped muscle units with curves of muscle fibers in the superficial mid-body myotome in metamorphosing lamprey. Small satellite-like cells were identified on central fibers in metamorphosing and adult lamprey muscle using routine histology and immunolocalization of Pax7 and MyoD with antibodies that specifically detect mammalian and teleost proteins. Transient “omega muscle units” may be a marker for impending myotomal growth and increasing swimming efficiency during maturation, possibly restricted to metamorphosis. Finding satellite-like cells suggests that Pax7 and MyoD may have distinctive roles in lamprey myogenesis.

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Decramer, Marc. "Response of the respiratory muscles to rehabilitation in COPD." Journal of Applied Physiology 107, no.3 (September 2009): 971–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.91459.2008.

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Respiratory rehabilitation is known to improve outcomes in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The question addressed in the present review is whether these beneficial effects are related to improvements in inspiratory muscle function. Respiratory muscle fatigue often did not occur during exercise in patients with COPD, since exercise limitation usually occurred when significant force reserve in the inspiratory muscles was still present. Notwithstanding, a number of observations may provide indirect evidence that respiratory muscle fatigue may occur during exercise. Some evidence is present that, in normal humans, whole body exercise training improved inspiratory muscle endurance, but no studies are available in patients with COPD. Animal studies invariably demonstrated that exercise training increased the number of oxidative fibers and oxidative enzyme activity in inspiratory muscles. These effects, however, were considerably smaller than the effects found on peripheral muscles with similar fiber composition. Clear evidence indicated that inspiratory muscle training (IMT) improved inspiratory muscle function. Two large meta-analyses indicated that, if the training load was properly controlled, IMT alone or combined with general exercise reconditioning improved inspiratory muscle strength and endurance and dyspnea. The combination did not result in greater improvements in functional exercise capacity. Animal studies and one patient study confirmed the occurrence of structural remodeling of the inspiratory muscles in response to IMT. The final question is whether improvements in inspiratory muscle function produced by IMT lead to improved outcomes in COPD. In all five studies in which training load was adequately controlled, a significant reduction of dyspnea during activities of daily living was found. Eight randomized studies examined the effects of the combination. Greater improvements in exercise capacity were only found in three studies, and none showed a greater reduction in dyspnea.

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Deschenes,MichaelR., Rachel Flannery, Alexis Hawbaker, Leah Patek, and Mia Mifsud. "Adaptive Remodeling of the Neuromuscular Junction with Aging." Cells 11, no.7 (March29, 2022): 1150. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11071150.

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Aging is associated with gradual degeneration, in mass and function, of the neuromuscular system. This process, referred to as “sarcopenia”, is considered a disease by itself, and it has been linked to a number of other serious maladies such as type II diabetes, osteoporosis, arthritis, cardiovascular disease, and even dementia. While the molecular causes of sarcopenia remain to be fully elucidated, recent findings have implicated the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) as being an important locus in the development and progression of that malady. This synapse, which connects motor neurons to the muscle fibers that they innervate, has been found to degenerate with age, contributing both to senescent-related declines in muscle mass and function. The NMJ also shows plasticity in response to a number of neuromuscular diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS). Here, the structural and functional degradation of the NMJ associated with aging and disease is described, along with the measures that might be taken to effectively mitigate, if not fully prevent, that degeneration.

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Siegman,MarionJ., Masumi Eto, and ThomasM.Butler. "Remodeling of the rat distal colon in diabetes: function and ultrastructure." American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology 310, no.2 (January15, 2016): C151—C160. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00253.2015.

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This study seeks to define and explain remodeling of the distal colon in the streptozotocin (STZ)-treated rat model of diabetes through analysis of resting and active length dependence of force production, chemical composition, and ultrastructure. Compared with untreated controls, the passive stiffness on extension of the diabetic muscle is high, and active force produced at short muscle lengths is amplified but is limited by an internal resistance to shortening. The latter are accounted for by a significant increase in collagen type 1, with no changes in types 3 and 4. In the diabetic colon, ultrastructural studies show unique, conspicuous pockets of collagen among muscle cells, in addition to a thickened basem*nt membrane and an extracellular space filled with collagen fibers and various fibrils. Measurements of DNA and total protein content revealed that the diabetic colon underwent hypertrophy, along with a proportional increase in actin and myosin contents, with no change in the actin-to-myosin ratio. Active force production per cross-sectional area was not different in the diabetic and normal muscles, consistent with the proportionality of changes in contractile proteins. The stiffness and the limit to shortening of the diabetic colon were significantly reduced by treatment with the glycation breaker alagebrium chloride (ALT-711), with no change in collagen contents. Functionally, this study shows that, in diabetes, the production of collagen type 1 and glycation increase stiffness, which limits distensibility on filling and limits shortening and expulsion of contents, both of which can be alleviated by treatment with ALT-711.

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Harber,MatthewP., AdamR.Konopka, MatthewD.Douglass, Kiril Minchev, LeonardA.Kaminsky, ToddA.Trappe, and Scott Trappe. "Aerobic exercise training improves whole muscle and single myofiber size and function in older women." American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology 297, no.5 (November 2009): R1452—R1459. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00354.2009.

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To comprehensively assess the influence of aerobic training on muscle size and function, we examined seven older women (71 ± 2 yr) before and after 12 wk of cycle ergometer training. The training program increased ( P < 0.05) aerobic capacity by 30 ± 6%. Quadriceps muscle volume, determined by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), was 12 ± 2% greater ( P < 0.05) after training and knee extensor power increased 55 ± 7% ( P < 0.05). Muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus lateralis to determine size and contractile properties of individual slow (MHC I) and fast (MHC IIa) myofibers, myosin light chain (MLC) composition, and muscle protein concentration. Aerobic training increased ( P < 0.05) MHC I fiber size 16 ± 5%, while MHC IIa fiber size was unchanged. MHC I peak power was elevated 21 ± 8% ( P < 0.05) after training, while MHC IIa peak power was unaltered. Peak force (Po) was unchanged in both fiber types, while normalized force (Po/cross-sectional area) was 10% lower ( P < 0.05) for both MHC I and MHC IIa fibers after training. The decrease in normalized force was likely related to a reduction ( P < 0.05) in myofibrillar protein concentration after training. In the absence of an increase in Po, the increase in MHC I peak power was mediated through an increased ( P < 0.05) maximum contraction velocity (Vo) of MHC I fibers only. The relative proportion of MLC1s (Pre: 0.62 ± 0.01; Post: 0.58 ± 0.01) was lower ( P < 0.05) in MHC I myofibers after training, while no differences were present for MLC2s and MLC3f isoforms. These data indicate that aerobic exercise training improves muscle function through remodeling the contractile properties at the myofiber level, in addition to pronounced muscle hypertrophy. Progressive aerobic exercise training should be considered a viable exercise modality to combat sarcopenia in the elderly population.

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Martin,KyleS., KelleyM.Virgilio, ShaynM.Peirce, and SilviaS.Blemker. "Computational Modeling of Muscle Regeneration and Adaptation to Advance Muscle Tissue Regeneration Strategies." Cells Tissues Organs 202, no.3-4 (2016): 250–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000443635.

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Skeletal muscle has an exceptional ability to regenerate and adapt following injury. Tissue engineering approaches (e.g. cell therapy, scaffolds, and pharmaceutics) aimed at enhancing or promoting muscle regeneration from severe injuries are a promising and active field of research. Computational models are beginning to advance the field by providing insight into regeneration mechanisms and therapies. In this paper, we summarize the contributions computational models have made to understanding muscle remodeling and the functional implications thereof. Next, we describe a new agent-based computational model of skeletal muscle inflammation and regeneration following acute muscle injury. Our computational model simulates the recruitment and cellular behaviors of key inflammatory cells (e.g. neutrophils and M1 and M2 macrophages) and their interactions with native muscle cells (muscle fibers, satellite stem cells, and fibroblasts) that result in the clearance of necrotic tissue and muscle fiber regeneration. We demonstrate the ability of the model to track key regeneration metrics during both unencumbered regeneration and in the case of impaired macrophage function. We also use the model to simulate regeneration enhancement when muscle is primed with inflammatory cells prior to injury, which is a putative therapeutic intervention that has not yet been investigated experimentally. Computational modeling of muscle regeneration, pursued in combination with experimental analyses, provides a quantitative framework for evaluating and predicting muscle regeneration and enables the rational design of therapeutic strategies for muscle recovery.

To the bibliography
Journal articles: 'Muscle fibers remodeling' – Grafiati (2024)

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