Author:
Corona Benjamin T.,Rouviere Clement,Hamilton Susan L.,Ingalls Christopher P.
Abstract
Recent studies suggest a link between exercise-induced rhabdomyolysis and mutations of the ryanodine receptor (RYR1) associated with malignant hyperthermia (MH). We hypothesized that MH-susceptible mice (RYR1Y522S/wt) would exhibit greater anterior crural muscle [tibialis anterior (TA) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles] damage and strength deficits following the performance of a single or repeated bouts of eccentric contractions compared with wild-type (WT) mice. After a single injury bout, RYR1Y522S/wtmice produced more isometric torque than WT mice immediately and 3 and 7 days postinjury. Moreover, EDL muscle isometric specific force deficits were fully recovered for RYR1Y522S/wtbut not WT mice 14 days postinjury. The percentage of fibers in TA muscle exhibiting signs of muscle damage 7 and 14 days postinjury were at least three times less in RYR1Y522S/wtthan in WT mice. Uninjured and injured EDL muscle from RYR1Y522S/wtmice also displayed greater S-glutathionylation of RYR1 than that from WT mice. During the weekly injury bouts, torque production by RYR1Y522S/wtmice was fully recovered before the third and fourth injury bouts, whereas torque was still reduced for WT mice. Three days after multiple injury bouts, there were ∼50% fewer fibers exhibiting signs of muscle damage in RYR1Y522S/wtthan in WT TA muscle. These findings indicate that the RYR1Y522S/wtmutation protects skeletal muscle from exercise-induced muscle injury and do not support a direct association between MH susceptibility and contraction-induced rhabdomyolysis when core temperature is maintained at lower physiological temperatures during exercise.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
27 articles.
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