Contact: Donna Krupa
Office: (301) 634-7209
Cell: (703) 967-2751
dkrupa@the-aps.org
Muscle Repair: Making A
Good System Better And Faster
Complicated plasminogen system yields potential therapeutic target;
Implications for aging and degenerative diseases
Inflammation’s role in natural muscle recovery
BETHESDA, Md. (July 12, 2005) – Skeletal muscles
naturally repair themselves very efficiently after injury. But when they
don’t, otherwise successful recovery following damage from overuse during
exercise, surgery or trauma can be stymied. Furthermore, as we age, muscle
repair slows noticeably, and in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy and other
degenerative muscle diseases, normal repair functions can’t cope with
disease progression.
Researchers from the University of Illinois-Chicago (UIC)
and University of Michigan report that while “skeletal muscles possess a
remarkable capacity for regeneration” and self-repair, deficiency in the
plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) actually promotes muscle
regeneration, making PAI-1 “a therapeutic target for enhancing muscle
regeneration.”
Moreover, they realized that the plasminogen system
interacts with the inflammatory, growth factor and other systems in a
complicated manner, indicating that the plasminogen system likely has
multiple functions.
For instance, Koh noted that “the inflammatory process
can be a double-edged sword for muscle repair. Inflammatory cells can
exacerbate an injury, but they also can produce substances that may be
required for repair. We would speculate that anti-inflammatory drugs may
not be such a good idea if they’re inhibiting repair-promoting macrophage
functions; they may give some short-term relief following injury, but muscle
repair may not be as efficient as it would be without these drugs.”
Striking, rapid differences in strength recovery
In the current study, the investigators found that in
mice lacking PAI-1, the activity of an enzyme called urokinase-type
plasminogen activator (uPA) was increased in damaged muscle. The result was
improved recovery of muscle function and accelerated muscle repair
associated with faster increases in proteins such as the myogenic
transcription factor MyoD. “In other words, we observed accelerated repair
over and above what is already a naturally efficient system,” lead author
Timothy J. Koh of UIC said later.
Role of macrophages likely important
Confirming earlier studies indicating a critical role
of the plasminogen system in muscle repair, the UIC-Michigan team reported
that deficiency in uPA pretty much eliminated muscle regeneration after
injury. Muscles in animals without uPA showed no evidence of repair and
little accumulation of macrophages, roaming cells that protect the body
against foreign substances. PAI-1 deficient muscles showed “increased
macrophage accumulation (and) the extent of macrophage accumulation
correlated with both the clearance of (damaged) protein after injury and the
efficiency of regeneration,” according to the report.
Research was funded in part by an NIH National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute grant (Sisson) and by a NASA Graduate Student
Research Fellowship (Bryer).
Editor’s note: A copy of the research paper by
Koh et al. is available to the media. Members of the media may obtain an
electronic version and interview members of the research team by contacting
Donna Krupa at the American Physiological Society, (301) 634-7209, cell
(703) 967-2751 or
dkrupa@the-aps.org.
* * *
APS
Conference on NEUROHYPOPHYSEAL HORMONES,
Vasopressin and Oxytocin:
From
Genomics and Physiology to Disease, and Therapy
July
16-20, 2005, Steamboat Springs, Colorado
http://www.the-aps.org/meetings/aps/steamboat/index.htm
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