Role of recovery of acetylcholine release in compromised neuromuscular junction function

•Under condition of compromised neuromuscular transmission, recovery of the readily releasable pool of acetylcholine is insufficient to maintain peak force production during functional movement.•Our data suggest that CMAP decrement more clearly reflect weakness rather than fatigability.•Even very sl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuromuscular disorders : NMD 2024-03, Vol.36, p.48-59
Hauptverfasser: Winther, Jeppe Blichfeldt, Morgen, Jeanette Jeppesen, Skov, Martin, Broch-Lips, Martin Gruwier, Nielsen, Ole Bækgaard, Overgaard, Kristian, Pedersen, Thomas Holm
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container_end_page 59
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container_start_page 48
container_title Neuromuscular disorders : NMD
container_volume 36
creator Winther, Jeppe Blichfeldt
Morgen, Jeanette Jeppesen
Skov, Martin
Broch-Lips, Martin Gruwier
Nielsen, Ole Bækgaard
Overgaard, Kristian
Pedersen, Thomas Holm
description •Under condition of compromised neuromuscular transmission, recovery of the readily releasable pool of acetylcholine is insufficient to maintain peak force production during functional movement.•Our data suggest that CMAP decrement more clearly reflect weakness rather than fatigability.•Even very slight activity may impact the sensitivity of RNS recordings. Everyday physical activities, such as walking, are enabled by repeated skeletal muscle contractions and require a well-functioning neuromuscular transmission. In myasthenic disorders, activities of daily living are debilitated by a compromised neuromuscular transmission leading to muscle weakness and fatiguability in patients. To enable physical activity, acetylcholine (ACh) is released repeatedly from the motor nerve, however, the role of the nerve terminals’ capacity to sustain ACh release to support repetitive contractions under compromised neuromuscular transmission remains unclear. To explore this, we studied synaptic and contractile function during repeated contractions in healthy rat skeletal muscles under conditions of pharmacological induced compromised neuromuscular transmission. Using recordings of endplate potentials, compound muscle action potential (CMAP) and force production in isolated skeletal muscles and living, anesthetized animals, we found that force and CMAP were markedly reduced by even very light activity performed up to 5 s prior to contraction showing that recovery of ACh release was insufficient to maintain synaptic transmission strength. Our results suggest that the timing of depletion and restoration of ACh release may impact clinical signs of weakness and fatigability in patients with impaired neuromuscular transmission and affect the sensitivity of electromyographic recordings in the clinic.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.nmd.2024.01.007
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Everyday physical activities, such as walking, are enabled by repeated skeletal muscle contractions and require a well-functioning neuromuscular transmission. In myasthenic disorders, activities of daily living are debilitated by a compromised neuromuscular transmission leading to muscle weakness and fatiguability in patients. To enable physical activity, acetylcholine (ACh) is released repeatedly from the motor nerve, however, the role of the nerve terminals’ capacity to sustain ACh release to support repetitive contractions under compromised neuromuscular transmission remains unclear. To explore this, we studied synaptic and contractile function during repeated contractions in healthy rat skeletal muscles under conditions of pharmacological induced compromised neuromuscular transmission. 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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete - AutoHoldings
subjects Compromised neuromuscular transmission
Fatigability
Muscle weakness
Recovery of acetylcholine release
Repetitive nerve stimulation
title Role of recovery of acetylcholine release in compromised neuromuscular junction function
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