Chronic Low-Frequency Stimulation Transforms Cat Masticatory Muscle Fibers into Jaw-Slow Fibers

Author:

Kang Lucia H.D.1,Hoh Joseph F.Y.1

Affiliation:

1. Discipline of Physiology and the Bosch Institute, School of Medical Sciences, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract

Cat masticatory muscle during regeneration expresses masticatory-specific myofibrillar proteins upon innervation by a fast muscle nerve but acquires the jaw-slow phenotype when innervated by a slow muscle nerve. Here, we test the hypothesis that chronic low-frequency stimulation simulating impulses from the slow nerve can result in masticatory-to-slow fiber–type transformation. In six cats, the temporalis muscle was continuously stimulated directly at 10 Hz for up to 12 weeks using a stimulator affixed to the skull. Stimulated muscles were analyzed by immunohistochemistry using, among others, monoclonal antibodies against masticatory-specific myosin heavy chain (MyHC), myosin binding protein-C, and tropomyosins. Under the electrodes, stimulation induced muscle regeneration, which generated slow fibers. Deep to the electrodes, at two to three weeks, two distinct populations of masticatory fibers began to express slow MyHC: 1) evenly distributed fibers that completely suppressed masticatory-specific proteins but transiently co-expressed fetal MyHCs, and 2) incompletely transformed fibers that express slow and masticatory but not fetal MyHCs. SDS-PAGE confirmed de novo expression of slow MyHC and β-tropomyosin in the stimulated muscles. We conclude that chronic low-frequency stimulation induces masticatory-to-slow fiber–type conversion. The two populations of transforming masticatory fibers may differ in their mode of activation or lineage of their myogenic cells.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Histology,Anatomy

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