4.7 Article

Reinnervation-induced alterations in rat skeletal muscle

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 595-602

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2006.05.012

Keywords

myofiber growth; innervation; satellite cells; fiber types; muscle transcription factors

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Denervation-induced myofiber atrophy can be reversed by reinnervation. Growing reinnervated myofibers upregulate numerous molecules, many of which determine the muscle fiber type. In the present study we aimed at identifying factors that might contribute specifically to myofiber growth after reinnervation. The common peroneal nerve of 15 male Wistar rats was cut and resutured without delay (9 animals) or with a delay of 4 weeks (6 animals). We studied the transcriptional repertoire of intact reinnervated tibialis anterior muscle by microarray gene analysis. We assessed SC activation by immunolabeling using anti-MyoD) and -myogenin antibodies. The percentage of SC expressing MyoD reached up to 50% of M-cadherin+ cells whereas the percentage of SC expressing myogenin was normal (< 10%) in all muscles examined. The values of ipsi- and contralateral muscles did not differ significantly from one another between right and left leg (p < 0.05). Thirteen known genes were differentially regulated after reinnervation compared with contralateral muscles. Five of them determine the slow-twitch fiber type (four and a half LIM domains 3, cardiac beta-myosin heavy chain, calsequestrin 2, troponin C (slow), and heart myosin tight chain), and three of them are neurally regulated (thrombospondin 4, transferrin receptor, cardiac ankyrin repeat protein). The results strengthen the notion that reinnervaton affects the molecular repertoire of the myofibers directly, leading to fiber type transformation and partial reversal of the denervation phenotype. By contrast, SC do not appear to be affected by reinnervation directly. They can be activated both in reinnervated and contralateral muscles, and they do not fully, differentiate. This makes them unlikely to contribute to myofiber growth. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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