Affiliation:
1. Department of Exercise and Sport Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611.
Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that a chronically active muscle, such as the rat diaphragm, would be more resistant to glucocorticoid-induced myopathy than a less active locomotor skeletal muscle (plantaris). Furthermore, we sought to determine whether endurance exercise could antagonize the glucocorticoid-induced atrophy in the diaphragm. Rats were assigned to one of seven experimental groups (n = 10 per group) and injected daily over a 10-day period with either a sham solution or prednisolone acetate: group 1: control; sedentary and sham injected; group 2: control; exercise trained and sham injected; group 3; sedentary; prednisolone (0.5 mg.kg-1 x day-1); group 4: sedentary; prednisolone (1.0 mg.kg-1 x day-1); group 5: sedentary; prednisolone (2.0 mg.kg-1 x day-1); group 6: sedentary; prednisolone (5.0 mg.kg-1 x day-1); group 7: exercise trained; prednisolone (5.0 mg.kg-1 x day-1). Slope differences in the dose-response curves suggest that prednisolone-induced muscle atrophy in the plantaris was more severe than that in the diaphragm. Furthermore, high doses of prednisolone resulted in a differential effect on muscle bioenergetic enzyme activities in the plantaris and diaphragm. Prednisolone treatment (> or = 2 mg.kg-1 x day-1) resulted in a significant reduction in phosphofructokinase activity (expressed as microM substrate.min-1 x mg protein-1) and an increase in 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity in the plantaris muscle. In contrast, prednisolone treatment did not influence phosphofructokinase activity (P > 0.05) in the diaphragm but decreased (P < 0.05) relative citrate synthase activity. Finally, 90 min daily of endurance exercise did not antagonize prednisolone-induced myopathy in either the diaphragm or the plantaris.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
48 articles.
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