4.5 Article

Nandrolone Normalizes Determinants of Muscle Mass and Fiber Type after Spinal Cord Injury

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA
Volume 29, Issue 8, Pages 1663-1675

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/neu.2011.2203

Keywords

muscle atrophy; nandrolone; oxidative metabolism; PGC-1 alpha; slow twitch muscle; spinal cord injury

Funding

  1. Veterans Health Administration, Rehabilitation Research and Development Service [B4162C, B4616R, B3347K]

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Spinal cord injury (SCI) results in atrophy of skeletal muscle and changes from slow oxidative to fast glycolytic fibers, which may reflect reduced levels of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator-1 alpha (PGC-1 alpha), increased myostatin signaling, or both. In animals, testosterone reduces loss of muscle fiber cross-sectional area and activity of enzymes of energy metabolism. To identify the molecular mechanisms behind the benefits of androgens on paralyzed muscle, male rats were spinal cord transected and treated for 8 weeks with vehicle, testosterone at a physiological replacement dose, or testosterone plus nandrolone, an anabolic steroid. Treatments were initiated immediately after SCI and continued until the day animals were euthanized. In the SCI animals, gastrocnemius muscle mass was significantly increased by testosterone plus nandrolone, but not by testosterone alone. Both treatments significantly reduced nuclear content of Smad2/3 and mRNA levels of activin receptor IIB and follistatin-like 3. Testosterone alone or with nandrolone reversed SCI-induced declines in cellular and nuclear levels of PGC-1 alpha protein and PGC-1 alpha mRNA levels. For PGC-1 alpha target genes, testosterone plus nandrolone partially reversed SCI-induced decreases in levels of proteins without corresponding increases in their mRNA levels. Thus, the findings demonstrate that following SCI, signaling through activin receptors and Smad2/3 is increased, and that androgens suppress activation of this signaling pathway. The findings also indicate that androgens upregulate PGC-1 alpha in paralyzed muscle and promote its nuclear localization, but that these effects are insufficient to fully activate transcription of PGC-1 alpha target genes. Furthermore, the transcription of these genes is not tightly coupled with their translation.

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