Cellular mechanisms and local progenitor activation to regulate skeletal muscle mass

被引:0
|
作者
Marco Cassano
Mattia Quattrocelli
Stefania Crippa
Ilaria Perini
Flavio Ronzoni
Maurilio Sampaolesi
机构
[1] SCIL Katholieke Universiteit Leuven,Translational Cardiomyology
[2] University of Pavia,Human Anatomy
关键词
Muscle hypertrophy; AKT; Magic-F1;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Skeletal muscle hypertrophy is a result of increased load, such as functional and stretch-overload. Activation of satellite cells and proliferation, differentiation and fusion are required for hypertrophy of overloaded skeletal muscles. On the contrary, a dramatic loss of skeletal muscle mass determines atrophy settings. The epigenetic changes involved in gene regulation at DNA and chromatin level are critical for the opposing phenomena, muscle growth and atrophy. Physiological properties of skeletal muscle tissue play a fundamental role in health and disease since it is the most abundant tissue in mammals. In fact, protein synthesis and degradation are finely modulated to maintain an appropriate muscle mass. When the molecular signaling is altered muscle wasting and weakness occurred, and this happened in most common inherited and acquired disorders such as muscular dystrophies, cachexia, and age-related wasting. To date, there is no accepted treatment to improve muscle size and strength, and these conditions pose a considerable anxiety to patients as well as to public health. Several molecules, including Magic-F1, myostatin inhibitor, IGF, glucocorticoids and microRNAs are currently investigated to interfere positively in the blueprint of skeletal muscle growth and regeneration.
引用
收藏
页码:243 / 253
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cellular mechanisms and local progenitor activation to regulate skeletal muscle mass
    Cassano, Marco
    Quattrocelli, Mattia
    Crippa, Stefania
    Perini, Ilaria
    Ronzoni, Flavio
    Sampaolesi, Maurilio
    JOURNAL OF MUSCLE RESEARCH AND CELL MOTILITY, 2009, 30 (7-8) : 243 - 253
  • [2] Recent progress toward understanding the molecular mechanisms that regulate skeletal muscle mass
    Goodman, Craig A.
    Mayhew, David L.
    Hornberger, Troy A.
    CELLULAR SIGNALLING, 2011, 23 (12) : 1896 - 1906
  • [3] Cellular mechanisms of skeletal muscle fatigue
    Westerblad, H
    Allen, DG
    MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR ASPECTS OF MUSCLE CONTRACTION, 2003, 538 : 563 - 571
  • [4] Skeletal muscle fatigue: Cellular mechanisms
    Allen, D. G.
    Lamb, G. D.
    Westerblad, H.
    PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2008, 88 (01) : 287 - 332
  • [5] Cellular and molecular mechanisms regulating skeletal muscle mass during strength training
    Freyssenet, D.
    SCIENCE & SPORTS, 2006, 21 (02) : 74 - 79
  • [6] CELLULAR MECHANISMS OF FATIGUE IN SKELETAL-MUSCLE
    WESTERBLAD, H
    LEE, JA
    LANNERGREN, J
    ALLEN, DG
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 1991, 261 (02): : C195 - C209
  • [7] Genetic and cellular regulation of skeletal muscle stem and progenitor cells
    Tajbakhsh, S.
    Kassar-Duchossoy, L.
    Giacone, E.
    Gayraud-Morel, B.
    Jory, A.
    Gomes, D.
    Shinin, V
    MECHANISMS OF DEVELOPMENT, 2005, 122 : S5 - S6
  • [8] Cooperative mechanisms in activation of skeletal muscle contraction
    Fitzsimons, DP
    Patel, JR
    Campbell, KS
    Moss, RL
    BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2000, 78 (01) : 230A - 230A
  • [9] Distinct but overlapping transcriptional mechanisms regulate MyoD gene activation in myotomal and limb skeletal muscle lineages
    Goldhamer, DJ
    Love, CM
    Kucharczuk, KL
    DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 1998, 198 (01) : 172 - 172
  • [10] Sensing local energetics to acutely regulate mitophagy in skeletal muscle
    Nichenko, Anna S.
    Specht, Kalyn S.
    Craige, Siobhan M.
    Drake, Joshua C.
    FRONTIERS IN CELL AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2022, 10