The Effects of Downhill Running and Maturation on Histological and Morphological Properties of Tendon and Enthesis in Mice

Author:

Ozone Kaichi12ORCID,Minegishi Yuki13ORCID,Oka Yuichiro1ORCID,Sato Michiaki1,Kanemura Naohiko4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health and Social Services, Health and Social Services, Graduate School of Saitama Prefectural University, Koshigaya 343-8540, Japan

2. Department of Rehabilitation, University of Tsukuba Hospital, Tsukuba 305-8576, Japan

3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Tokyo 102-0083, Japan

4. Department of Physical Therapy, Health and Social Services, Saitama Prefectural University, Koshigaya 343-8540, Japan

Abstract

To date, it remains unclear how overuse affects the tendons and entheses at different stages of maturation. Therefore, we evaluated histological and morphological changes in the tendons and entheses in adolescent (4-week-old) and adult mice (8-week-old) by performing flat-land and downhill running exercises. The mice were divided into the Sedentary, High Flat (flat-land high-speed running; concentric-contraction exercise), Low Down (downhill low-speed running; eccentric-contraction exercise), and High Down (downhill high-speed running; eccentric-contraction exercise) groups. Histological changes and inflammatory factor expressions were compared in the entheses and tendons after 4 weeks of exercise. Downhill, but not flat-land high-speed running, induced muscle–tendon complex hypertrophy in both adolescent and adult mice. Histological enthesis changes were induced in both groups during downhill running but were less pronounced in adult mice. Conversely, no significant cell aggregation or fiber orientation changes were observed in the tendon, but increased inflammatory factors were observed in both groups, with significantly higher expression in the tendons of adult mice. Downhill running induced histological and morphological enthesis changes and inflammatory factor increase in the tendons, regardless of running speed variations. These results may help elucidate the pathogenesis of enthesopathy and tendinopathy, which have different pathophysiologies despite having the same pathogenetic factors.

Funder

Japan Sports Medicine Foundation 2020

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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