Philippou Anastassios, Minozzo Fabio C, Spinazzola Janelle M, Smith Lucas R, Lei Hanqin, Rassier Dilson E, Barton Elisabeth R
*Department of Physiology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Goudi-Athens, Greece; Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Department of Kinesiology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Pennsylvania Muscle Institute, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; and Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
*Department of Physiology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Goudi-Athens, Greece; Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Department of Kinesiology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Pennsylvania Muscle Institute, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; and Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA
FASEB J. 2015 Jul;29(7):2769-79. doi: 10.1096/fj.14-267336. Epub 2015 Mar 20.
Muscle loading is important for maintaining muscle mass; when load is removed, atrophy is inevitable. However, in clinical situations such as critical care myopathy, masticatory muscles do not lose mass. Thus, their properties may be harnessed to preserve mass. We compared masticatory and appendicular muscles responses to microgravity, using mice aboard the space shuttle Space Transportation System-135. Age- and sex-matched controls remained on the ground. After 13 days of space flight, 1 masseter (MA) and tibialis anterior (TA) were frozen rapidly for biochemical and functional measurements, and the contralateral MA was processed for morphologic measurements. Flight TA muscles exhibited 20 ± 3% decreased muscle mass, 2-fold decreased phosphorylated (P)-Akt, and 4- to 12-fold increased atrogene expression. In contrast, MAs had no significant change in mass but a 3-fold increase in P-focal adhesion kinase, 1.5-fold increase in P-Akt, and 50-90% lower atrogene expression compared with limb muscles, which were unaltered in microgravity. Myofibril force measurements revealed that microgravity caused a 3-fold decrease in specific force and maximal shortening velocity in TA muscles. It is surprising that myofibril-specific force from both control and flight MAs were similar to flight TA muscles, yet power was compromised by 40% following flight. Continued loading in microgravity prevents atrophy, but masticatory muscles have a different set point that mimics disuse atrophy in the appendicular muscle.
肌肉负荷对于维持肌肉质量很重要;当负荷去除时,萎缩不可避免。然而,在诸如危重症肌病等临床情况下,咀嚼肌不会丢失质量。因此,可以利用它们的特性来维持质量。我们利用搭载在航天飞机“发现号”(STS-135)上的小鼠,比较了咀嚼肌和附属肌对微重力的反应。年龄和性别匹配的对照组留在地面。经过13天的太空飞行后,迅速冷冻1块咬肌(MA)和胫骨前肌(TA)用于生化和功能测量,对另一侧的MA进行形态学测量。飞行组的TA肌肉表现出肌肉质量下降20±3%,磷酸化(P)-Akt减少2倍,萎缩基因表达增加4至12倍。相比之下,MA的质量没有显著变化,但与在微重力环境下未改变的肢体肌肉相比,P-粘着斑激酶增加3倍,P-Akt增加1.5倍,萎缩基因表达降低50-90%。肌原纤维力测量显示,微重力导致TA肌肉的比力和最大缩短速度降低3倍。令人惊讶的是,对照组和飞行组MA的肌原纤维比力与飞行组TA肌肉相似,但飞行后功率降低了40%。在微重力环境下持续加载可防止萎缩,但咀嚼肌有一个不同的设定点,类似于附属肌的废用性萎缩。