Experimental acute degenerative changes in skeletal muscle accompanied by a drastic increase in cathepsins B&L were induced in rats by intramuscular injection of a local anesthetic, bupivacaine. Cathepsins B&L have been implicated in the rapid disappearance of muscle fibers. Degenerating muscle showed a spotty fluorescence when stained with antibodies against cathepsin B, indicating that the increased cathepsin B did not originate from the muscle itself, but from invading phagocytes. We report here results showing that cathepsin B of nonmuscle cell origin is involved in the breakdown of myofibrillar proteins in acute bupivacaine-induced muscle degeneration.
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