Elevated myonuclear density during skeletal muscle hypertrophy in response to training is reversed during detraining

Cory M. Dungan, Kevin A. Murach, Kaitlyn K. Frick, Savannah R. Jones, Samuel E. Crow, Davis A. Englund, Ivan J. Vechetti, Vandre C. Figueiredo, Bryana M. Levitan, Jonathan Satin, John J. McCarthy, Charlotte A. Peterson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

72 Scopus citations

Abstract

Myonuclei gained during exercise-induced skeletal muscle hypertrophy may be long-lasting and could facilitate future muscle adaptability after deconditioning, a concept colloquially termed "muscle memory." The evidence for this is limited, mostly due to the lack of a murine exercise-training paradigm that is nonsurgical and reversible. To address this limitation, we developed a novel progressive weightedwheel- running (PoWeR) model of murine exercise training to test whether myonuclei gained during exercise persist after detraining. We hypothesized that myonuclei acquired during training-induced hypertrophy would remain following loss of muscle mass with detraining. Singly housed female C57BL/6J mice performed 8 wk of PoWeR, while another group performed 8 wk of PoWeR followed by 12 wk of detraining. Age-matched sedentary cage-dwelling mice served as untrained controls. Eight weeks of PoWeR yielded significant plantaris muscle fiber hypertrophy, a shift to a more oxidative phenotype, and greater myonuclear density than untrained mice. After 12 wk of detraining, the plantaris muscle returned to an untrained phenotype with fewer myonuclei. A finding of fewer myonuclei simultaneously with plantaris deconditioning argues against a muscle memory mechanism mediated by elevated myonuclear density in primarily fasttwitch muscle. PoWeR is a novel, practical, and easy-to-deploy approach for eliciting robust hypertrophy in mice, and our findings can inform future research on the mechanisms underlying skeletal muscle adaptive potential and muscle memory.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)C649-C654
JournalAmerican Journal of Physiology - Cell Physiology
Volume316
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2019 the American Physiological Society.

Keywords

  • Exercise
  • Muscle memory
  • Myonuclear accretion
  • Satellite cell
  • Weighted-wheel running

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Physiology
  • Cell Biology

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