3.8 Article

A single bout of eccentric exercise increases HSP27 and HSC/HSP70 in human skeletal muscle

Journal

ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA
Volume 171, Issue 2, Pages 187-193

Publisher

BLACKWELL SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-201x.2001.00795.x

Keywords

exercise-induced muscle damage; heat shock proteins; humans; protein expression; resistance exercise; stress response

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Changes in heat shock proteins (HSPs), HSP27 and HSC/HSP70 were characterized in human biceps brachii muscle following damaging high-force eccentric exercise. Male and female volunteers performed a maximal eccentric resistance exercise with the elbow flexor muscles of the non-dominant arm known to be sufficient to cause substantial muscle damage. Protein extracts of biopsy tissue samples taken 48 h post-exercise were immunoblotted for HSC/HSP70 and HSP27. Densitometric analysis demonstrated that these proteins increased significantly (P < 0.01) in the damaged biceps brachii relative to the control arm. The HSC/HSP70 increased 1064% in the exercised sample while HSP27 increased by 234%. Although the literature reports a muscular heat shock response following aerobic, oxidative exercise, this is the first documentation of increases in protein expression of both HSC/HSP70 and HSP27 in human skeletal muscle in response to a single bout of resistance exercise.

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