The effects of clenbuterol beta(2)-agonist administration were investigated in normal and atrophied [15-day hindlimb-unloaded (HU)] rat soleus muscles. We showed that clenbuterol had a specific effect on muscle tissue, since it reduces soleus atrophy induced by HU. The study of Ca(2+) activation properties of single skinned fibers revealed that clenbuterol partly prevented the decrease in maximal tension after HU, with a preferential effect on fast-twitch fibers. Clenbuterol improved the Ca(2+) sensitivity in slow- and fast-twitch fibers by shifting the tension-pCa relationship toward lower Ca(2+) concentrations, but this effect was more marked after HU than in normal conditions. Whole muscle electrophoresis indicated slow-to-fast transitions of the myosin heavy chain isoforms for unloaded and for clenbuterol-treated soleus. The coupling of the two latter conditions did not, however, increase these phenotypical transformations. Our findings indicated that clenbuterol had an anabolic action and a beta(2)-adrenergic effect on muscle fibers and appeared to counteract some effects of unloading disuse conditions.
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