Myofibre damage in human skeletal muscle: effects of electrical stimulation versus voluntary contraction
Disruption to proteins within the myofibre after a single bout of unaccustomed eccentric exercise is hypothesized to induce delayed onset of muscle soreness and to be associated with an activation of satellite cells. This has been shown in animal models using electrical stimulation but not in humans...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2007-08, Vol.583 (1), p.365-380 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Disruption to proteins within the myofibre after a single bout of unaccustomed eccentric exercise is hypothesized to induce
delayed onset of muscle soreness and to be associated with an activation of satellite cells. This has been shown in animal
models using electrical stimulation but not in humans using voluntary exercise. Untrained males ( n
= 8, range 22â27 years) performed 210 maximal eccentric contractions with each leg on an isokinetic dynamometer, voluntarily
(VOL) with one leg and electrically induced (ES) with the other leg. Assessments from the skeletal muscle were obtained prior
to exercise and at 5, 24, 96 and 192 h postexercise. Muscle tenderness rose in VOL and ES after 24 h, and did not differ between
groups. Maximal isometric contraction strength, rate of force development and impulse declined in the VOL leg from 4 h after
exercise, but not in ES (except at 24 h). In contrast, a significant disruption of cytoskeletal proteins (desmin) and a rise
of myogenic growth factors (myogenin) occurred only in ES. Intracellular disruption and destroyed Z-lines were markedly more
pronounced in ES (40%) compared with VOL (10%). Likewise, the increase in satellite cell markers [neural cell adhesion molecule
(N-CAM) and paired-box transcription factor (Pax-7)] was more pronounced in ES versus VOL. Finally, staining of the intramuscular connective tissue (tenascin C) was increased equally in ES and VOL after exercise.
The present study demonstrates that in human muscle, the delayed onset of muscle soreness was not significantly different
between the two treatments despite marked differences in intramuscular histological markers, in particular myofibre proteins
and satellite cell markers. An increase in tenascin C expression in the midbelly of the skeletal muscle in both legs provides
further evidence of a potential role for the extracellular matrix in the phenomenon of delayed onset of muscle soreness. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2007.128827 |