Regeneration after cardiotoxin injury of innervated and denervated slow and fast muscles of mammals: myosin isoform analysis

A d'ALBIS, R Couteaux, C Janmot… - European journal of …, 1988 - Wiley Online Library
A d'ALBIS, R Couteaux, C Janmot, A Roulet, JC MIRA
European journal of biochemistry, 1988Wiley Online Library
The regeneration of adult rat and mouse slow (soleus) and fast (sternomastoid) muscles was
examined after the degeneration of myofibers had been achieved by a snake venom
cardiotoxin, under experimental conditions devised to spare as far as possible the satellite
cells, the nerves, and the blood vessels of the muscles. Three days after the injury, no
myosin was detectable in selected portions of the muscles. New myosins of embryonic,
neonatal, and adult types started to be synthesized during the following two days. Adult …
The regeneration of adult rat and mouse slow (soleus) and fast (sternomastoid) muscles was examined after the degeneration of myofibers had been achieved by a snake venom cardiotoxin, under experimental conditions devised to spare as far as possible the satellite cells, the nerves, and the blood vessels of the muscles.
Three days after the injury, no myosin was detectable in selected portions of the muscles. New myosins of embryonic, neonatal, and adult types started to be synthesized during the following two days. Adult myosins thus appeared more precociously than in development, which implies that the synthesis of myosin isoforms during regeneration does not entirely ‘recapitulate’ the sequence of myosin transitions observed during normal development.
Two weeks after the injury, the isomyosin electrophoretic pattern displayed by regenerated muscles was already the same as that of control muscles; the normal adult pattern was therefore expressed more rapidly in regenerating than in developing muscles.
Except for the synthesis of the slow isoform which was generally inhibited in denervated muscles, the same types of myosins were expressed during the early stages of regeneration in denervated as in innervated muscles; long‐term denervation prevented however the qualitative and quantitative recovery of the normal myosin pattern.
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