Abstract
Severe burn injury induces a myriad of deleterious effects to skeletal muscle, resulting in impaired function and delayed recovery. Following burn, catabolic signaling and myofiber atrophy are key fiber-intrinsic determinants of weakness; less well understood are alterations in the interstitial environment surrounding myofibers. Muscle quality, specifically alterations in the extracellular matrix (ECM), modulates force transmission and strength. We sought to determine the impact of severe thermal injury on adaptation to the muscle ECM and quantify muscle fibrotic burden. After a 30% total body surface area dorsal burn, spinotrapezius muscle was harvested from mice at 7 (7d, n = 5), 14 (14d, n = 4), and 21 days (21d, n = 4), and a sham control group was also examined (Sham, n = 4). Expression of transforming growth factor- (TGF), myostatin, and downstream effectors and proteases involved in fibrosis and collagen remodeling were measured by immunoblotting, and immunohistochemical and biochemical analyses assessed fibrogenic cell abundance and collagen deposition. Myostatin signaling increased progressively through 21 days postburn alongside fibrogenic/adipogenic progenitor cell expansion, with abundance peaking at 14 days postburn. Postburn, elevated expression of tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase 1 supported collagen remodeling resulting in a net accumulation of muscle collagen content. Collagen accumulation peaked at 14 days postburn but remained elevated through 21 days postburn, demonstrating minimal resolution of burn-induced fibrosis. These findings highlight a progressive upregulation of fibrogenic processes following burn injury, eliciting a fibrotic muscle phenotype that hinders regenerative capacity and is not resolved with 21 days of recovery.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | C277-C287 |
| Journal | American Journal of Physiology - Cell Physiology |
| Volume | 319 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Aug 2020 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:Copyright © 2020 the American Physiological Society
Funding
C.R.B. was supported by the National Institutes of Health Training Grant T32AG000270. This work was supported by Shriners Hospitals for Children Grant 85116 to C.S.F. and by the National Institutes of Health Grants R01 GM112936 to C.C.F. and R01 AR072061 to C.S.F.
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| National Institutes of Health (NIH) | T32AG000270 |
| National Institute of General Medical Sciences DP2GM119177 Sophie Dumont National Institute of General Medical Sciences | R01GM112936 |
| Shriners Hospitals for Children Cincinnati | R01 GM112936, 85116, R01 AR072061 |
Keywords
- Burn
- Extracellular matrix
- Fibrogenic/adipogenic
- Muscle fibrosis
- Myostatin
- Progenitor cell
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Physiology
- Cell Biology