Effects of previous strength training can be long-lived, even after prolonged subsequent inactivity, and retraining is facilitated by a previous training episode. Traditionally, such "muscle memory" has been attributed to neural factors in the absence of any identified local memory mechanism in the muscle tissue. We have used in vivo imaging techniques to study live myonuclei belonging to distinct muscle fibers and observe that new myonuclei are added before any major increase in size during overload. The old and newly acquired nuclei are retained during severe atrophy caused by subsequent denervation lasting for a considerable period of the animal's lifespan. The myonuclei seem to be protected from the high apoptotic activity found in inactive muscle tissue. A hypertrophy episode leading to a lasting elevated number of myonuclei retarded disuse atrophy, and the nuclei could serve as a cell biological substrate for such memory. Because the ability to create myonuclei is impaired in the elderly, individuals may benefit from strength training at an early age, and because anabolic steroids facilitate more myonuclei, nuclear permanency may also have implications for exclusion periods after a doping offense. muscle memory | muscle nuclei | muscle atrophy | muscle hypertrophy | apoptosis
Sustained pressure overload induces heart failure, the main cause of mortality in the Western world. Increased understanding of the underlying molecular mechanisms is essential to improve heart failure treatment. Despite important functions in other tissues, cardiac proteoglycans have received little attention. Syndecan‐4, a transmembrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan, is essential for pathological remodeling, and we here investigated its expression and shedding during heart failure. Pressure overload induced by aortic banding for 24 h and 1 week in mice increased syndecan‐4 mRNA, which correlated with mRNA of inflammatory cytokines. In cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts, tumor necrosis factor‐α, interleukin‐1β and lipopolysaccharide through the toll‐like receptor‐4, induced syndecan‐4 mRNA. Bioinformatical and mutational analyses in HEK293 cells identified a functional site for the proinflammatory nuclear factor‐κB transcription factor in the syndecan‐4 promoter, and nuclear factor‐κB regulated syndecan‐4 mRNA in cardiac cells. Interestingly, tumor necrosis factor‐α, interleukin‐1β and lipopolysaccharide induced nuclear factor‐κB‐dependent shedding of the syndecan‐4 ectodomain from cardiac cells. Overexpression of syndecan‐4 with mutated enzyme‐interacting domains suggested enzyme‐dependent heparan sulfate chains to regulate shedding. In cardiac fibroblasts, lipopolysaccharide reduced focal adhesion assembly, shown by immunohistochemistry, suggesting that inflammation‐induced shedding affects function. After aortic banding, a time‐dependent cardiac recruitment of T lymphocytes was observed by measuring CD3, CD4 and CD8 mRNA, which was reduced in syndecan‐4 knockout hearts. Finally, syndecan‐4 mRNA and shedding were upregulated in failing human hearts. Conclusively, our data suggest that syndecan‐4 plays an important role in the immune response of the heart to increased pressure, influencing cardiac remodeling and failure progression.
Elucidating the molecular pathways linking electrical activity to gene expression is necessary for understanding the effects of exercise on muscle. Fast muscles express higher levels of MyoD and lower levels of myogenin than slow muscles, and we have previously linked myogenin to expression of oxidative enzymes. We here report that in slow muscles, compared with fast, 6 times as much of the MyoD is in an inactive form phosphorylated at T115. In fast muscles, 10 h of slow electrical stimulation had no effect on the total MyoD protein level, but the fraction of phosphorylated MyoD was increased 4-fold. Longer stimulation also decreased the total level of MyoD mRNA and protein, while the level of myogenin protein was increased. Fast patterned stimulation did not have any of these effects. Overexpression of wild type MyoD had variable effects in active slow muscles, but increased expression of fast myosin heavy chain in denervated muscles. In normally active soleus muscles, MyoD mutated at T115 (but not at S200) increased the number of fibres containing fast myosin from 50% to 85% in mice and from 13% to 62% in rats. These data establish de-phosphorylated active MyoD as a link between the pattern of electrical activity and fast fibre type in adult muscles.
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