4.4 Article

Properties of slow- and fast-twitch skeletal muscle from mice with an inherited capacity for hypoxic exercise

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpb.2004.05.010

Keywords

hypoxia; skeletal muscle; capillary density; myosin heavy chain isoforms; fiber type

Funding

  1. NIAMS NIH HHS [R15-AR46184-01A1] Funding Source: Medline

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Muscle fiber type, myosin heavy chain (MI-lQ isoform composition, capillary density (CD) and citrate synthase (CS) activity were investigated in predominantly slow-twitch (soleus or SOL) and fast-twitch (extensor digitorum longus or EDL) skeletal muscle from mice with inherited differences in hypoxic exercise tolerance. Striking differences in hypoxic exercise tolerance previously have been found in two inbred strains of mice, Balb/cByJ (C) and C57BL/6J (136), and their F1 hybrid following exposure to hypobaric hypoxia. Mice from the three strains were exposed for 8 weeks to either normobaric normoxia or hypobaric hypoxia (1/2 atm). Hypoxia exposure led to a slightly higher 2b fiber composition and a lower fiber area of types 1 and 2a in SOL of all mice. In the EDL, muscle fiber and MHC isoform composition remained unaffected by chronic hypoxia. Chronic hypoxia did not significantly affect CD in either muscle from any of the three strains. There were relatively larger differences in CS activity among strains and treatment, and in SOL the highest CS activity was found in the F1 mice that had been acclimated to hypoxia. In general, however, neither differences among strains nor treatment in these properties of muscle vary in a way that clearly relates to inherited hypoxic exercise tolerance. (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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