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1.
Contraction-induced injury to single muscle fibers: velocity of stretch does not influence the force deficit 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Lynch Gordon S.; Faulkner John A. 《American journal of physiology. Cell physiology》1998,275(6):C1548
We tested the null hypothesis that theseverity of injury to single muscle fibers following a singlepliometric (lengthening) contraction is not dependent on the velocityof stretch. Each single permeabilized fiber obtained from extensordigitorum longus muscles of rats was maximally activated and thenexposed to a single stretch of either 5, 10, or 20% strain [%of fiber length (Lf)] ata velocity of 0.5, 1.0, or 2.0 Lf /s. Theforce deficit, the difference between maximum tetanic isometric force(Po) before and after the stretch expressed as apercentage of the control value forPo before the stretch, provided anestimate of the magnitude of muscle injury. Despite a fourfold rangefrom the lowest to the highest velocities, force deficits were notdifferent among stretches of the same strain. At stretches of 20%strain, even an eightfold range of velocities produced no difference inthe force deficit, although 40% of the fibers were torn apart at a velocity of 4 Lf /s. We conclude that, withinthe range of velocities tolerated by single permeabilized fibers, theseverity of contraction-induced injury is not related to the velocityof stretch. 相似文献
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Intramembrane charge movement and L-type calcium current in skeletal muscle fibers isolated from control and mdx mice 下载免费PDF全文
Dystrophin-deficient muscle fibers from mdx mice are believed to suffer from increased calcium entry and elevated submembranous calcium level, the actual source and functional consequences of which remain obscure. Here we compare the properties of the dihydropyridine receptor as voltage sensor and calcium channel in control and mdx muscle fibers, using the silicone-voltage clamp technique. In control fibers charge movement followed a two-state Boltzmann distribution with values for maximal charge, midpoint voltage, and steepness of 23 +/- 2 nC/ micro F, -37 +/- 3 mV, and 13 +/- 1 mV (n = 7). Essentially identical values were obtained in mdx fibers and the time course of charge recovery from inactivation was also similar in the two populations (tau approximately 6 s). In control fibers the voltage dependence of the slow calcium current elicited by 100-ms-long pulses gave values for maximal conductance, apparent reversal potential, half-activation potential, and steepness factor of 156 +/- 15 S/F, 65.5 +/- 2.9 mV, -0.76 +/- 1.2 mV, and 6.2 +/- 0.5 mV (n = 17). In mdx fibers, the half-activation potential of the calcium current was slightly more negative (-6.2 +/- 1.2 mV, n = 16). Also, when using longer pulses, the time constant of calcium current decay was found to be significantly larger (by a factor of 1.5-2) in mdx than in control fibers. These changes in calcium current properties are unlikely to be primarily responsible for a dramatic alteration of intracellular calcium homeostasis. They may be speculated to result, at least in part, from remodeling of the submembranous cytoskeleton network due to the absence of dystrophin. 相似文献
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Dystrophin is absent in muscle fibers of patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and in muscle fibers from the mdx mouse, an animal model of DMD. Disrupted excitation-contraction (E-C) coupling has been postulated to be a functional consequence of the lack of dystrophin, although the evidence for this is not entirely clear. We used mechanically skinned fibers (with a sealed transverse tubular system) prepared from fast extensor digitorum longus muscles of wild-type control and dystrophic mdx mice to test the hypothesis that dystrophin deficiency would affect the depolarization-induced contractile response (DICR) and sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) function. DICR was similar in muscle fibers from mdx and control mice, indicating normal voltage regulation of Ca2+ release. Nevertheless, rundown of DICR (<50% of initial) was reached more rapidly in fibers from mdx than control mice [control: 32 +/- 5 depolarizations (n = 14 fibers) vs. mdx: 18 +/- 1 depolarizations (n = 7) before rundown, P < 0.05]. The repriming rate for DICRs was decreased in fibers from mdx mice, with lower submaximal DICR observed after 5, 10, and 20 s of repriming compared with fibers from control mice (P < 0.05). SR Ca2+ reloading was not different in fibers from control and mdx mice, and no difference was observed in SR Ca2+ leak. Caffeine (2-7 mM)-induced contraction was diminished in fibers from mdx mice compared with control (P < 0.05), indicating depressed SR Ca2+ release channel activity. Our findings indicate that fast fibers from mdx mice exhibit some impairment in the events mediating E-C coupling and SR Ca2+ release channel activity. 相似文献
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Skeletal muscle unloaded shortening has been indirectly determined in the past. Here, we present a novel high-speed optical tracking technique that allows recording of unloaded shortening in single intact, voltage-clamped mammalian skeletal muscle fibers with 2-ms time resolution. L-type Ca2+ currents were simultaneously recorded. The time course of shortening was biexponential: a fast initial phase, τ1, and a slower successive phase, τ2, with activation energies of 59 kJ/mol and 47 kJ/mol. Maximum unloaded shortening speed, vu,max, was faster than that derived using other techniques, e.g., ∼14.0 L0 s−1 at 30°C. Our technique also allowed direct determination of shortening acceleration. We applied our technique to single fibers from C57 wild-type, dystrophic mdx, and minidystrophin-expressing mice to test whether unloaded shortening was affected in the pathophysiological mechanism of Duchenne muscular dystrophy. vu,max and au,max values were not significantly different in the three strains, whereas τ1 and τ2 were increased in mdx fibers. The results were complemented by myosin heavy and light chain (MLC) determinations that showed the same myosin heavy chain IIA profiles in the interossei muscles from the different strains. In mdx muscle, MLC-1f was significantly increased and MLC-2f and MLC-3f somewhat reduced. Fast initial active shortening seems almost unaffected in mdx muscle. 相似文献
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《FEBS letters》1993,320(3):276-280
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients and mdx mice are characterized by the absence of dystrophin, a membrane cytoskeletal protein. Dystrophin is associated with a large oligomeric complex of sarcolemmal glycoproteins, including dystroglycan which provides a linkage to the extarcellular matrix component, laminin. The finding that all of the dystrophin-associated proteins (DAPs) are drastically reduced in DMD and mdx skeletal muscle supports the primary function of dystrophin as an anchor of the sarcolemmal glycoprotein complex to the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton. These findings indicate that the efficacy of dystrophin gene therapy will depend not only on replacing dystrophin but also on restoring all of the DAPs in the sarcolemma. Here we have investigated the status of the DAPs in the skeletal muscle of mdx mice transgenic for the dystrophin gene. Our results demonstrate that transfer of dystrophin gene restores all of the DAPs together with dystrophin, suggesting that dystrophin gene therapy should be effective in restoring the entire dystrophin-glycoprotein complex. 相似文献
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Ca(2+) influx and opening of Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels in muscle fibers from control and mdx mice 下载免费PDF全文
Using the patch-clamp technique, we demonstrate that, in depolarized cell-attached patches from mouse skeletal muscle fibers, a short hyperpolarization to resting value is followed by a transient activation of Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels (K(Ca)) upon return to depolarized levels. These results indicate that sparse sites of passive Ca(2+) influx at resting potentials are responsible for a subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) load high enough to induce K(Ca) channel activation upon muscle activation. We then investigate this phenomenon in mdx dystrophin-deficient muscle fibers, in which an elevated Ca(2+) influx and a subsequent subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) overload are suspected. The number of Ca(2+) entry sites detected with K(Ca) was found to be greater in mdx muscle. K(Ca) activity reflecting subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) load was also found to be independent of the activity of leak channels carrying inward currents at negative potentials in mdx muscle. These results indicate that the sites of passive Ca(2+) influx newly described in this study could represent the Ca(2+) influx pathways responsible for the subsarcolemmal Ca(2+) overload in mdx muscle fibers. 相似文献
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The purpose was to investigate the contribution of mechanical damage to sarcomeres to the greater susceptibility of dystrophic muscle fibers to contraction-induced injury. Single stretches provide an effective method for studying mechanical factors that contribute to the initiation of contraction-induced injury. We hypothesized that, after single stretches, the deficits in isometric force would be greater for muscles of mdx than C57BL/10 mice, whereas membrane damage would be minimal for all muscles. Extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus muscles of mice were removed under anesthesia with Avertin (tribromoethanol). During the plateau of a maximum isometric contraction in vitro, muscles were stretched through single strains of 20-60% fiber length. Isometric force was remeasured 1 min later, and muscles were then incubated in procion orange dye to identify fibers with membrane damage. Force deficits at 1 min were two- to threefold greater for EDL muscles of mdx compared with C57BL/10 mice, whereas no significant differences were observed between soleus muscles of mdx and C57BL/10 mice. For all muscles, membrane damage was minimal and not significantly increased by single stretches for either strain of mice. These data support a critical role of dystrophin maintaining sarcomere stability in EDL muscles, whereas soleus muscles retain abilities, in the absence of dystrophin, not different from control muscles to resist sarcomere damage. 相似文献
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Under resting conditions, external Ca(2+) is known to enter skeletal muscle cells, whereas Ca(2+) stored in the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) leaks into the cytosol. The nature of the pathways involved in the sarcolemmal Ca(2+) entry and in the SR Ca(2+) leak is still a matter of debate, but several lines of evidence suggest that these Ca(2+) fluxes are up-regulated in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. We investigated here SR calcium permeation at resting potential and in response to depolarization in voltage-controlled skeletal muscle fibers from control and mdx mice, the mouse model of Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Using the cytosolic Ca(2+) dye Fura2, we first demonstrated that the rate of Ca(2+) increase in response to cyclopiazonic acid (CPA)-induced inhibition of SR Ca(2+)-ATPases at resting potential was significantly higher in mdx fibers, which suggests an elevated SR Ca(2+) leak. However, removal of external Ca(2+) reduced the rate of CPA-induced Ca(2+) increase in mdx and increased it in control fibers, which indicates an up-regulation of sarcolemmal Ca(2+) influx in mdx fibers. Fibers were then loaded with the low-affinity Ca(2+) dye Fluo5N-AM to measure intraluminal SR Ca(2+) changes. Trains of action potentials, chloro-m-cresol, and depolarization pulses evoked transient Fluo5N fluorescence decreases, and recovery of voltage-induced Fluo5N fluorescence changes were inhibited by CPA, demonstrating that Fluo5N actually reports intraluminal SR Ca(2+) changes. Voltage dependence and magnitude of depolarization-induced SR Ca(2+) depletion were found to be unchanged in mdx fibers, but the rate of the recovery phase that followed depletion was found to be faster, indicating a higher SR Ca(2+) reuptake activity in mdx fibers. Overall, CPA-induced SR Ca(2+) leak at -80 mV was found to be significantly higher in mdx fibers and was potentiated by removal of external Ca(2+) in control fibers. The elevated passive SR Ca(2+) leak may contribute to alteration of Ca(2+) homeostasis in mdx muscle. 相似文献
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The BCL-xL and ACR-1 genes promote differentiation and reduce apoptosis in muscle fibers of mdx mice
Mikhaĭlov VM Kropotov AV Zelenin AV Krutilina RI Kolesnikov VA Zelenina IA Baranov AN Shteĭn GI Ostapenko OV Tomilin NV Baranov VS 《Genetika》2002,38(11):1445-1450
The effects of the human BCL-xL and ACR-1 genes on dystrophin expression in cross-striated muscle fibers (CSMF) and on CSMF viability were studied in mdx mice after ballistic cotransfection with the human dystrophin minigene. In control mice, the proportion of dystrophin-positive (D(+)) and dying CSMF were 2.1 +/- 0.1 and 2.1 +/- 0.3%, respectively. Introduction of the dystrophin minigene (20 micrograms of the pSG5dys plasmid) increased the proportions of D(+) and dying CSMF to 5.6 +/- 1.4% and 4.5 +/- 0.9%, respectively. When pSG5dys was introduced along with the pSFFV-Neo plasmid carrying the BCL-xL gene (10 micrograms of each plasmid per shot), the death of CSMF decreased to 3.7 +/- 1% and the proportion of D(+) CSMF significantly (P < 0.05) increased to 12.2 +/- 2.2%. Contransfection with the dystrophin minigene and the BCL-xL gene at 20 micrograms of each plasmid per shot did not stimulate generation of D(+) CSMF, but did reduce the CSMF death to 1.5 +/- 0.3%. Introduction of pSG5dys along with the pRc-CMV-10.1 plasmid containing the ACR-1 gene (10 micrograms of each plasmid per shot) reduced the proportion of D(+) CSMF to 1.1 +/- 0.5% and significantly reduced the proportion of dying CSMF to 0.9 +/- 0.3% as compared with the proportions observed in intact mice or in mice subjected to transfection with pSG5dys. Introduction of the pSG5dys plasmid substantially reduced the proportion of CSMF with peripheral nuclei, suggesting disturbed CSMF differentiation. After cotransfection with the human-dystrophin minigene, the BCL-xL and ACR-1 genes did not affect the extent of CSMF differentiation as compared with that observed in the case of the dystrophin minigene alone. Thus, ballistic transfection of mdx mice with the human dystrophin gene used along with the BCL-xL or ACR-1 gene was shown to suppress the death of muscle fibers and to expedite dystrophin synthesis and cell differentiation. 相似文献
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Analysis of mitochondrial function is central to the study of intracellular energy metabolism, mechanisms of cell death and pathophysiology of a variety of human diseases, including myopathies, neurodegenerative diseases and cancer. However, important properties of mitochondria differ in vivo and in vitro. Here, we describe a protocol for the analysis of functional mitochondria in situ, without the isolation of organelles, in selectively permeabilized cells or muscle fibers using digitonin or saponin. A specially designed substrate/inhibitor titration approach allows the step-by-step analysis of several mitochondrial complexes. This protocol allows the detailed characterization of functional mitochondria in their normal intracellular position and assembly, preserving essential interactions with other organelles. As only a small amount of tissue is required for analysis, the protocol can be used in diagnostic settings in clinical studies. The permeabilization procedure and specific titration analysis can be completed in 2 h. 相似文献
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Dystrophin-associated proteins are greatly reduced in skeletal muscle from mdx mice 总被引:21,自引:8,他引:21 下载免费PDF全文
Dystrophin, the protein product of the human Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene, exists in skeletal muscle as a large oligomeric complex that contains four glycoproteins of 156, 50, 43, and 35 kD and a protein of 59 kD. Here, we investigated the relative abundance of each of the components of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex in skeletal muscle from normal and mdx mice, which are missing dystrophin. Immunoblot analysis using total muscle membranes from control and mdx mice of ages 1 d to 30 wk found that all of the dystrophin-associated proteins were greatly reduced (80-90%) in mdx mouse skeletal muscle. The specificity of the loss of the dystrophin-associated glycoproteins was demonstrated by the finding that the major glycoprotein composition of skeletal muscle membranes from normal and mdx mice was identical. Furthermore, skeletal muscle membranes from the dystrophic dy/dy mouse exhibited a normal density of dystrophin and dystrophin-associated proteins. Immunofluorescence microscopy confirmed the results from the immunoblot analysis and showed a drastically reduced density of dystrophin-associated proteins in mdx muscle cryosections compared with normal and dy/dy mouse muscle. Therefore, our results demonstrate that all of the dystrophin-associated proteins are significantly reduced in mdx skeletal muscle and suggest that the loss of dystrophin-associated proteins is due to the absence of dystrophin and not due to secondary effects of muscle fiber degradation. 相似文献
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Myotubes from transgenic mdx mice expressing full-length dystrophin show normal calcium regulation. 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4 下载免费PDF全文
W F Denetclaw Jr F W Hopf G A Cox J S Chamberlain R A Steinhardt 《Molecular biology of the cell》1994,5(10):1159-1167
A lack of dystrophin results in muscle degeneration in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Dystrophin-deficient human and mouse muscle cells have higher resting levels of intracellular free calcium ([Ca2+]i) and show a related increase in single-channel open probabilities of calcium leak channels. Elevated [Ca2+]i results in high levels of calcium-dependent proteolysis, which in turn increases calcium leak channel activity. This process could initiate muscle degeneration by further increasing [Ca2+]i and proteolysis in a positive feedback loop. Here, we tested the direct effect of restoration of dystrophin on [Ca2+]i and channel activity in primary myotubes from mdx mice made transgenic for full-length dystrophin. Transgenic mdx mice have been previously shown to have normal dystrophin localization and no muscle degeneration. Fura-2 calcium measurements and single-channel patch recordings showed that resting [Ca2+]i levels and open probabilities of calcium leak channels of transgenic mdx myotubes were similar to normal levels and significantly lower than mdx littermate controls (mdx) that lack dystrophin. Thus, restoration of normal calcium regulation in transgenic mdx mice may underlie the resulting absence of degeneration. 相似文献
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Mikhaĭlov VM Kaminskaia EV Popov BV Kuzovatov SN Skripkina NS Kosikova GP Zaĭchik AM Grinchuk TM Nikol'skiĭ NN 《Tsitologiia》2010,52(10):853-857
The purpose of the study was the morphological and histochemical characteristics of differentiation of tumors developed after transplantation of GFP-positive mesenchymal bone-marrow stem cells (MSC) of transgenic mice C57BL/6 into M. quadriceps femoris of mdx mice. The tumors occurred only after transplantation of MSCs of 43-45th passages and did not arise after transplantation of MSCs of the 15th passage. No tumors developed also after transplantation of MSCs of 43-45th passages into muscle of C57BL/6 mice. The average weight of tumors appeared in 4 mdx mice studied was 1.3 +/- 0.5 g. All four tumors were classified as mesenchymomas because they originated from mesenchymal stem cells. Most of the periphery of the tumors was classified as fibrosarcomas with mitotic index 0.9 +/- 0.1%. The central parts of tumors had areas with epithelial like morphology of cells. Such cells showed positive reactivity for alcyan blue staining at pH 2.5, which indicated chondrocyte nature of the cells. No mitosis was observed in epithelial like cells. In the tumors, there were also areas with bone trabeculae containing megacaryocytes and foci of myeloid and erythrocyte hematopoiesis. There were also areas with neuronal and glial cells, and accumulations of adipocytes. One of the tumors was classified as a round cells sarcoma. The observed types of tumor cell differentiation in vivo were in accordance with described in literature types of MSCs differentiation after induction in vitro with special inductors. The spectrum of in vivo differentiation of transgenic GFP-positive MSCs after transplantation to mdx mice was broader than the spectrum of in vivo differentiation of transfected or transformed in vitro adult MSCs after transplantation to immunodeficient mice and mdx mice. 相似文献
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N. V. Bulyakova M. A. Stenina V. S. Azarova L. I. Krivov V. I. Savchyuk 《Biology Bulletin》2008,35(2):151-160
Responses of the skeletal muscle tissue and thymus to muscle injury (complete transection) and wound xenoplasty with the minced muscle tissue of newborn rats (tissue therapy) were studied in mdx mice aged 12–16 and 40–48 weeks. The muscle tissue of mdx mice has genetic defects causing chronic dystrophic processes in it. The muscle tissue of young mdx mice proved to retain a relatively high capacity for regeneration. Under conditions of tissue therapy of the wound, the formation of muscle fibers from muscle cells of the graft and active regeneration of muscle fibers in the recipient mice were observed, and no structural defects were detected in the thymus. The capacity of posttraumatic regeneration in old mdx mice was lower. The xenogenic graft was undergoing resorption, thereby suppressing regeneration of muscle fibers and causing further tissue destruction in the injured muscle. The thymus parenchyma was subject to degenerative changes such as the formation of gaps, hemorrhagic foci, and increased numbers of macrophages and mast cells. 相似文献