Smoke-induced neuromuscular junction degeneration precedes the fibre type shift and atrophy in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Autor: | Mylène Aubertin-Leheudre, R. Thomas Jagoe, Jean Bourbeau, Tanja Taivassalo, Paul Rozakis, Vita Sonjak, Daren Elkrief, Sophia Kapchinsky, Russell T. Hepple, Charlotte H. Pion, Kayla Miguez, Angela Rico de Souza, Sudhakar Aare, Carolyn J. Baglole, Norah J. MacMillan, Madhusudanarao Vuda, Jacinthe Baril, José A. Morais |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Denervation medicine.medical_specialty COPD Physiology Vastus lateralis muscle business.industry medicine.disease Neuromuscular junction Muscle atrophy Motor unit 03 medical and health sciences 030104 developmental biology Endocrinology medicine.anatomical_structure Atrophy Internal medicine medicine medicine.symptom business Reinnervation |
Zdroj: | The Journal of Physiology. 596:2865-2881 |
ISSN: | 0022-3751 |
Popis: | Key points Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is largely caused by smoking, and patient limb muscle exhibits a fast fibre shift and atrophy. We show that this fast fibre shift is associated with type grouping, suggesting recurring cycles of denervation-reinnervation underlie the type shift. Compared to patients with normal fat-free mass index (FFMI), patients with low FFMI exhibited an exacerbated fibre type shift, marked accumulation of very small persistently denervated muscle fibres, and a blunted denervation-responsive transcript profile, suggesting failed denervation precipitates muscle atrophy in patients with low FFMI. Sixteen weeks of passive tobacco smoke exposure in mice caused neuromuscular junction degeneration, consistent with a key role for smoke exposure in initiating denervation in COPD. Abstract A neurological basis for the fast fibre shift and atrophy seen in limb muscle of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) has not been considered previously. The objective of our study was: (1) to determine if denervation contributes to fast fibre shift and muscle atrophy in COPD; and (2) to assess using a preclinical smoking mouse model whether chronic tobacco smoke (TS) exposure could initiate denervation by causing neuromuscular junction (NMJ) degeneration. Vastus lateralis muscle biopsies were obtained from severe COPD patients [n = 10 with low fat-free mass index (FFMI), 65 years; n = 15 normal FFMI, 65 years) and healthy age- and activity-matched non-smoker control subjects (CON; n = 11, 67 years), to evaluate morphological and transcriptional markers of denervation. To evaluate the potential for chronic TS exposure to initiate these changes, we examined NMJ morphology in male adult mice following 16 weeks of passive TS exposure. We observed a high proportion of grouped fast fibres and a denervation transcript profile in COPD patients, suggesting that motor unit remodelling drives the fast fibre type shift in COPD patient limb muscle. A further exacerbation of fast fibre grouping in patients with low FFMI, coupled with blunted reinnervation signals, accumulation of very small non-specific esterase hyperactive fibres and neural cell adhesion molecule-positive type I and type II fibres, suggests denervation-induced exhaustion of reinnervation contributes to muscle atrophy in COPD. Evidence from a smoking mouse model showed significant NMJ degeneration, suggesting that recurring denervation in COPD is probably caused by decades of chronic TS exposure. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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