4.0 Article

Exploring skeletal muscle tolerance and whole-body metabolic effects of FDA-approved drugs in a volumetric muscle loss model

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.14814/phy2.15756

Keywords

formoterol; muscle function; neuromusculoskeletal injury; nintedanib; skeletal muscle injury

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Volumetric muscle loss (VML) leads to impaired muscle regeneration, and adjunctive pharmaceuticals offer partial remediation. Two FDA-approved pharmaceutical modalities, nintedanib and combined formoterol and leucine, were evaluated for their tolerance and efficacy in addressing the pathophysiology of the remaining muscle tissue after VML injury. The results show that formoterol plus leucine mitigated muscle loss, improved whole-body metabolism, and muscle strength, while nintedanib had no effect on the muscle pathophysiology after VML. Further optimization, including larger animal models, is warranted for formoterol treatment.
Volumetric muscle loss (VML) is associated with persistent functional impairment due to a lack of de novo muscle regeneration. As mechanisms driving the lack of regeneration continue to be established, adjunctive pharmaceuticals to address the pathophysiology of the remaining muscle may offer partial remediation. Studies were designed to evaluate the tolerance and efficacy of two FDA-approved pharmaceutical modalities to address the pathophysiology of the remaining muscle tissue after VML injury: (1) nintedanib (an anti-fibrotic) and (2) combined formoterol and leucine (myogenic promoters). Tolerance was first established by testing low- and high-dosage effects on uninjured skeletal muscle mass and myofiber cross-sectional area in adult male C57BL/6J mice. Next, tolerated doses of the two pharmaceutical modalities were tested in VML-injured adult male C57BL/6J mice after an 8-week treatment period for their ability to modulate muscle strength and whole-body metabolism. The most salient findings indicate that formoterol plus leucine mitigated the loss in muscle mass, myofiber number, whole-body lipid oxidation, and muscle strength, and resulted in a higher whole-body metabolic rate (p=0.016); nintedanib did not exacerbate or correct aspects of the muscle pathophysiology after VML. This supports ongoing optimization efforts, including scale-up evaluations of formoterol treatment in large animal models of VML.

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