keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38720632/insertions-of-the-striated-muscles-in-the-skin-and-mucosa-a-histological-study-of-fetuses-and-cadavers
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ji Hyun Kim, Gen Murakami, José Francisco Rodríguez-Vázquez, Ryo Sekiya, Tianyi Yang, Sin-Ichi Abe
Striated muscle insertions into the skin and mucosa are present in the head, neck, and pelvic floor. We reexamined the histology of these tissues to elucidate their role in transmission of the force. We examined histological sections of 25 human fetuses (gestational ages of ~11-19 weeks and ~26-40 weeks) and 6 cadavers of elderly individuals. Facial muscle insertion or terminal almost always formed as an interdigitation with another muscle or as a circular arrangement in which muscle fiber insertions were sandwiched and mechanically supported by other muscle fibers (like an in-series muscle)...
May 9, 2024: Anatomy & Cell Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38719184/reactive-oxygen-species-promote-endurance-exercise-induced-adaptations-in-skeletal-muscles
#22
REVIEW
Scott K Powers, Zsolt Radak, Li Li Ji, Malcolm Jackson
The discovery that contracting skeletal muscle generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) was first reported over 40 years ago. The prevailing view in the 1980s was that exercise-induced ROS production promotes oxidation of proteins and lipids resulting in muscle damage. However, a paradigm shift occurred in the 1990s as growing research revealed that ROS are signaling molecules, capable of activating transcriptional activators/coactivators and promoting exercise-induced muscle adaptation. Growing evidence supports the notion that reduction-oxidation (redox) signaling pathways play an important role in the muscle remodeling that occurs in response to endurance exercise training...
May 6, 2024: Journal of Sport and Health Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38718005/dynamics-of-pax7-expression-during-development-muscle-regeneration-and-in-vitro-differentiation-of-satellite-cells-in-rainbow-trout-oncorhynchus-mykiss
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cécile Rallière, Sabrina Jagot, Nathalie Sabin, Jean-Charles Gabillard
Essential for muscle fiber formation and hypertrophy, muscle stem cells, also called satellite cells, reside beneath the basal lamina of the muscle fiber. Satellite cells have been commonly identified by the expression of the Paired box 7 (Pax7) due to its specificity and the availability of antibodies in tetrapods. In fish, the identification of satellite cells remains difficult due to the lack of specific antibodies in most species. Based on the development of a highly sensitive in situ hybridization (RNAScope®) for pax7, we showed that pax7+ cells were detected in the undifferentiated myogenic epithelium corresponding to the dermomyotome at day 14 post-fertilization in rainbow trout...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38717695/human-shoulder-anatomy-new-ultrasound-anatomical-and-microscopic-perspectives
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Beatriz Arrillaga, Maribel Miguel-Pérez, Ingrid Möller, Laura Rubio, Juan Blasi, Albert Pérez-Bellmunt, Juan Carlos Ortiz-Sagristà, Sara Ortiz-Miguel, Carlo Martinoli
This study aimed to describe the shoulder anatomy, together with the anatomical relationships in adults and early stages of development. The shoulder muscles were studied from ultrasound, anatomical, and microscopic perspectives in a sample of 34 human shoulders. Thickness measurements were taken of the tendons and fasciae of the subscapularis, long head tendon of the biceps brachii, supraspinatus, infraspinatus, and teres minor. Ultrasound and dissection techniques are strongly correlated. However, the measurements obtained from the dissection technique were superior to those obtained from the ultrasound in all cases, except for the thickness of the long head tendon of the biceps brachii, the teres minor tendon, and the fascia thickness of the infraspinatus...
May 8, 2024: Anatomical Science International
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38717370/comparison-of-the-phenotypic-flexibility-of-muscle-and-body-condition-of-migrant-and-resident-white-crowned-sparrows
#25
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Marilyn Ramenofsky, Andrew W Campion, Darren T Hwee, Stacy K Wood, Jesse S Krause, Zoltán Németh, Jonathan H Pérez, Sue Bodine
AbstractSeasonally breeding birds express variations of traits (phenotypic flexibility) throughout their life history stages that represent adaptations to environmental conditions. Changes of body condition during migration have been well studied, whereas alterations of skeletal and cardiac muscles, body mass, and fat scores have yet to be characterized throughout the spring or fall migratory stages. Additionally, we examined flexible patterns of muscle, body mass, and fat score in migrant white-crowned sparrows ( Zonotrichia leucophrys gambelii ) in comparison with those in a resident subspecies ( Zonotrichia leucophrys nuttalli ) during the stages they share to evaluate the influence of different life histories...
2024: Ecol Evol Physiol
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38715692/whole-body-muscle-magnetic-resonance-imaging-in-inflammatory-myopathy-with-mitochondrial-pathology
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wagner Cid Palmeira Cavalcante, André Macedo Serafim da Silva, Rodrigo de Holanda Mendonça, Cristiane de Araújo Martins Moreno, Bruna Moreira de Souza Proença, Júlio Brandão Guimarães, Alípio Gomes Ormond Filho, Edmar Zanoteli
INTRODUCTION: Inflammatory myopathy with mitochondrial pathology (IM-Mito) is a rare condition described in a few case series, and it is not clear whether it is a specific disease or a variant of Inclusion Body Myositis (IBM). Radiological data of IM-Mito patients has only been evaluated in one study. AIM: To analyze whole-body muscle magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features in patients with IM-Mito compared with individuals with IBM. METHODS: Fourteen IM-Mito and ten IBM patients were included...
2024: Frontiers in Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38715161/tradeoffs-between-bite-force-and-gape-in-eulemur-and-varecia
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Myra F Laird, Taylor A Polvadore, Gabrielle A Hirschkorn, Julie C McKinney, Callum F Ross, Andrea B Taylor, Claire E Terhune, Jose Iriarte-Diaz
In 1974, Sue Herring described the relationship between two important performance variables in the feeding system, bite force and gape. These variables are inversely related, such that, without specific muscular adaptations, most animals cannot produce high bite forces at large gapes for a given sized muscle. Despite the importance of these variables for feeding biomechanics and functional ecology, the paucity of in vivo bite force data in primates has led to bite forces largely being estimated through ex vivo methods...
May 2024: Journal of Morphology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38714002/preventive-and-therapeutic-vascular-photobiomodulation-decreases-the-inflammatory-markers-and-enhances-the-muscle-repair-process-in-an-animal-model
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tainá Caroline Dos Santos Malavazzi, Lucas Andreo, Andreia Martinelli, Maria Fernanda Setúbal Destro Rodrigues, Anna Carolina Ratto Tempestini Horliana, Sandra Kalil Bussadori, Kristianne Porta Santos Fernandes, Fabio Daumas Nunes, Raquel Agnelli Mesquita-Ferrari
Photobiomodulation therapy (PBM) has shown positive effects when applied locally to modulate the inflammatory process and facilitate muscle repair. However, the available literature on the mechanisms of action of vascular photobiomodulation (VPBM), a non-invasive method of vascular irradiation, specifically in the context of local muscle repair, is limited. Thus, this study aimed to assess the impact of vascular photobiomodulation (VPBM) using a low-level laser (LLL) on the inflammatory response and the process of skeletal muscle repair whether administered prior to or following cryoinjury-induced acute muscle damage in the tibialis anterior (TA) muscles...
April 24, 2024: Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology. B, Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38712533/subacute-cadmium-exposure-changes-different-metabolic-functions-leading-to-type-1-and-2-diabetes-mellitus-features-in-female-rats
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charles S da Costa, Thiago F de Oliveira, Flavia C F Dos Santos, Alessandra S Padilha, Maiara Krause, Maria Tereza W D Carneiro, Leandro Miranda-Alves, Jones B Graceli
Cadmium (Cd) is a heavy metal that acts as endocrine disrupting chemical (EDC). Few studies have investigated the effects of Cd exposure on metabolic dysfunctions, such as type 1 and 2 diabetes mellitus (T1DM and T2DM). Thus, we assessed whether subacute Cd exposure at occupational levels causes abnormalities in white adipose tissue (WAT), liver, pancreas, and skeletal muscle. We administered cadmium chloride (CdCl2 ) (100 ppm in drinking water for 30 days) to female rats and evaluated Cd levels in serum and metabolic organs, morphophysiology, inflammation, oxidative stress, fibrosis, and gene expression...
May 7, 2024: Environmental Toxicology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38711362/time-dependent-reduction-in-oxidative-capacity-among-cultured-myotubes-from-spinal-cord-injured-individuals
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stanislava Stevanovic, Andrea Dalmao-Fernandez, Derya Mohamed, Tuula A Nyman, Emil Kostovski, Per Ole Iversen, Mladen Savikj, Natasa Nikolic, Arild C Rustan, G Hege Thoresen, Eili T Kase
BACKGROUND: Skeletal muscle adapts in reaction to contractile activity to efficiently utilize energy substrates, primarily glucose and free fatty acids (FA). Inactivity leads to atrophy and a change in energy utilization in individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI). The present study aimed to characterize possible inactivity-related differences in the energy metabolism between skeletal muscle cells cultured from satellite cells isolated 1- and 12-months post-SCI. METHODS: To characterize inactivity-related disturbances in spinal cord injury, we studied skeletal muscle cells isolated from SCI subjects...
May 6, 2024: Acta Physiologica
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38709599/accelerated-physics-inspired-inference-of-skeletal-muscle-microstructure-from-diffusion-weighted-mri
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Noel Naughton, Stacey Cahoon, Brad Sutton, John G Georgiadis
Muscle health is a critical component of overall health and quality of life. However, current measures of skeletal muscle health take limited account of microstructural variations within muscle, which play a crucial role in mediating muscle function. To address this, we present a physics-inspired, machine learning-based framework for the non-invasive estimation of microstructural organization in skeletal muscle from diffusion-weighted MRI (dMRI) in an uncertainty-aware manner. To reduce the computational expense associated with direct numerical simulations of dMRI physics, a polynomial meta-model is developed that accurately represents the input/output relationships of a high-fidelity numerical model...
May 6, 2024: IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38709037/assessing-rat-diaphragm-motor-unit-connectivity-outcome-measures-as-quantitative-biomarkers-of-phrenic-motor-neuron-degeneration-and-compensation
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Arsh Ketabforoush, Meifang Wang, Catherine L Smith, William David Arnold, Nicole L Nichols
Loss of ventilatory muscle function is a consequence of motor neuron injury and neurodegeneration (e.g., cervical spinal cord injury and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, respectively). Phrenic motor neurons are the final link between the central nervous system and muscle, and their respective motor units (groups of muscle fibers innervated by a single motor neuron) represent the smallest functional unit of the neuromuscular ventilatory system. Compound muscle action potential (CMAP), single motor unit potential (SMUP), and motor unit number estimation (MUNE) are established electrophysiological approaches that enable the longitudinal assessment of motor unit integrity in animal models over time but have mostly been applied to limb muscles...
April 19, 2024: Journal of Visualized Experiments: JoVE
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38707574/anatomic-variations-of-the-deltoid-muscle-insertion-a-cadaveric-study
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Arjun Vohra, Benjamin Paul, Patrick Saunders, Youssef Galal, Stephen Yao, Clayton Hui, Evan Lederman, Michael McKee, Anup Shah
BACKGROUND: The deltoid is a trisegmented muscle with anterior, middle, and posterior components. While the clinical relevance of the presence of anatomic variations of the deltoid origin and insertion continues to be debated, the architecture of the deltoid muscle is more complex than initially believed. This study aimed to evaluate the gross anatomy of the deltoid muscle insertion by qualitatively and quantitatively characterizing the insertion and location of the deltoid muscle's anterior, middle, and posterior components...
May 2024: JSES international
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38706964/pro-brain-derived-neurotrophic-factor-bdnf-but-not-mature-bdnf-is-expressed-in-human-skeletal-muscle-implications-for-exercise-induced-neuroplasticity
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sebastian Edman, Oscar Horwath, Thibaux Van der Stede, Sarah Joan Blackwood, Isabel Moberg, Henrik Strömlind, Fabian Nordström, Maria Ekblom, Abram Katz, William Apró, Marcus Moberg
Exercise promotes brain plasticity partly by stimulating increases in mature brain-derived neurotrophic factor (mBDNF), but the role of the pro-BDNF isoform in the regulation of BDNF metabolism in humans is unknown. We quantified the expression of pro-BDNF and mBDNF in human skeletal muscle and plasma at rest, after acute exercise (+/- lactate infusion), and after fasting. Pro-BDNF and mBDNF were analyzed with immunoblotting, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, immunohistochemistry, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction...
2024: Function
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38704020/novel-superior-oblique-anterior-fiber-plication-with-or-without-adjustable-sliding-knot-for-extorsion
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maude Anderson, Erick D Bothun
PURPOSE: To report a novel surgical technique to correct excyclotropia, consisting of a superior oblique anterior fibers plication (SOAFP) with or without a hemihangback anterior knot, allowing access for postoperative adjustment. METHODS: A retrospective interventional case series was conducted. Fourteen patients, 21-92 years of age, underwent SOAFP (18 eyes, 14 eyes on adjustable), at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. SOAFP was the only procedure performed in 12 eyes; in 6 it was performed in conjunction with up to four horizontal rectus muscle recession, resection, and/or plication...
May 2, 2024: Journal of AAPOS: the Official Publication of the American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38703863/gene-structure-expression-and-function-analysis-of-the-myod-gene-in-the-pacific-white-shrimp-litopenaeus-vannamei
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yanting Xia, Xiaojun Zhang, Xiaoxi Zhang, Haochen Zhu, Xiaoyun Zhong, Weixiao Song, Jianbo Yuan, Zhenxia Sha, Fuhua Li
The Pacific white shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei is a representative species of decapod crustacean and an economically important marine aquaculture species worldwide. However, research on the genes involved in muscle growth and development in shrimp is still lacking. MyoD is recognized as a crucial regulator of myogenesis and plays an essential role in muscle growth and differentiation in various animals. Nonetheless, little information is available concerning the function of this gene among crustaceans. In this study, we identified a sequence of the MyoD gene (LvMyoD) with a conserved bHLH domain in the L...
May 2, 2024: Gene
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38703031/effect-of-sex-and-milk-replacer-with-or-without-supplemental-carnitine-and-arginine-on-growth-characteristics-carcass-and-meat-quality-of-artificially-reared-low-birth-weight-pigs
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Johannes G Madsen, Michael Kreuzer, Paolo Silacci, Giuseppe Bee
This study compared milk replacer either remaining unsupplemented (CON) or supplemented with 0.5 g l-carnitine plus 16.7 g l-arginine/kg (CarArg) and fed to 48 L-BtW artificially reared piglets (24 per group) from day 7 to 28 days of age. Eight farrowing series were needed to complete the study. On day 28, the lightest piglets were slaughtered, and the heaviest pigs were weaned. The heaviest pigs were weaned on day 28 and offered free access to a starter (weaning to 25 kg body weight (BW)), grower (25-60 kg BW), and finisher diet (60 kg to 96 kg BW on day 170 of age)...
May 4, 2024: Journal of Animal Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38701640/the-importance-of-developmental-programming-in-the-beef-industry
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
George A Perry, Thomas H Welsh
The beef industry relies on multiple focused segments (e.g., cow-calf, stocker/feeder, and meat packing) to supply the world with beef. Thus, the potential impact of developmental programming on the beef industry needs to be evaluated with regards to the different production traits that drive profitability within each segment. For example, when nutrient restriction of dams occurred early in gestation embryo survival was decreased and the ovarian reserve of heifer progeny was negatively affected. Restriction during mid- to late gestation negatively impacted first service conception rates and pregnancy success of daughters...
April 26, 2024: Animal Reproduction Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38701374/excess-intramyocellular-lipid-does-not-affect-muscle-fiber-biophysical-properties-in-mice-or-people-with-metabolically-abnormal-obesity
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karen C Shen, Kelsey H Collins, Jeremie L A Ferey, Alan Fappi, Jeremy J McCormick, Bettina Mittendorfer, Farshid Guilak, Gretchen A Meyer
Observational studies show correlations between intramyocellular lipid (IMCL) content and muscle strength and contractile function in people with "metabolically abnormal" obesity. However, a clear physiologic mechanism for this association is lacking and causation is debated. We combined immunofluorescent confocal imaging with force measurements on permeabilized muscle fibers from metabolically normal and metabolically abnormal mice and metabolically normal (defined as normal fasting plasma glucose and glucose tolerance) and metabolically abnormal (defined as pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes) people with overweight/obesity to evaluate relationships among myocellular lipid droplet characteristics (droplet size and density) and biophysical (active contractile and passive viscoelastic) properties...
May 3, 2024: Diabetes
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38701072/phf2-regulates-sarcomeric-gene-transcription-in-myogenesis
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Taku Fukushima, Yuka Hasegawa, Sachi Kuse, Taiju Fujioka, Takeshi Nikawa, Satoru Masubuchi, Iori Sakakibara
Myogenesis is regulated mainly by transcription factors known as Myogenic Regulatory Factors (MRFs), and the transcription is affected by epigenetic modifications. However, the epigenetic regulation of myogenesis is poorly understood. Here, we focused on the epigenomic modification enzyme, PHF2, which demethylates histone 3 lysine 9 dimethyl (H3K9me2) during myogenesis. Phf2 mRNA was expressed during myogenesis, and PHF2 was localized in the nuclei of myoblasts and myotubes. We generated Phf2 knockout C2C12 myoblasts using the CRISPR/Cas9 system and analyzed global transcriptional changes via RNA-sequencing...
2024: PloS One
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