4.6 Article

Restricted physical activity after volumetric muscle loss alters whole-body and local muscle metabolism

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 601, Issue 4, Pages 743-761

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP283959

Keywords

beta(2) Adrenergic receptor agonist; formoterol; metabolic flexibility; orthopaedic trauma; physical inactivity; skeletal muscle injury

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This study investigated the impact of restricting activity on metabolism and skeletal muscle function following injury, and aimed to enhance the metabolic and contractile function of the remaining muscle through treatment with formoterol. The results showed that restricting activity had a significant effect on metabolism and skeletal muscle function, while formoterol treatment alleviated these effects and promoted muscle recovery.
Volumetric muscle loss (VML) is the traumatic loss of skeletal muscle, resulting in chronic functional deficits and pathological comorbidities, including altered whole-body metabolic rate and respiratory exchange ratio (RER), despite no change in physical activity in animal models. In other injury models, treatment with beta(2) receptor agonists (e.g. formoterol) improves metabolic and skeletal muscle function. We aimed first to examine if restricting physical activity following injury affects metabolic and skeletal muscle function, and second, to enhance the metabolic and contractile function of the muscle remaining following VML injury through treatment with formoterol. Adult male C57Bl/6J mice (n = 32) underwent VML injury to the posterior hindlimb compartment and were randomly assigned to unrestricted or restricted activity and formoterol treatment or no treatment; age-matched injury naive mice (n = 4) were controls for biochemical analyses. Longitudinal 24 h evaluations of physical activity and whole-body metabolism were conducted following VML. In vivo muscle function was assessed terminally, and muscles were biochemically evaluated for protein expression, mitochondrial enzyme activity and untargeted metabolomics. Restricting activity chronically after VML had the greatest effect on physical activity and RER, reflected in reduced lipid oxidation, although changes were attenuated by formoterol treatment. Formoterol enhanced injured muscle mass, while mitigating functional deficits. These novel findings indicate physical activity restriction may recapitulate following VML clinically, and adjunctive oxidative treatment may create a metabolically beneficial intramuscular environment while enhancing the injured muscle's mass and force-producing capacity. Further investigation is needed to evaluate adjunctive oxidative treatment with rehabilitation, which may augment the muscle's regenerative and functional capacity following VML.

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