International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jul 2024)

Molecular Signaling Effects behind the Spontaneous Soleus Muscle Activity Induced by 7-Day Rat Hindlimb Suspension

  • Xenia V. Sergeeva,
  • Kristina A. Sharlo,
  • Sergey A. Tyganov,
  • Vitaliy E. Kalashnikov,
  • Boris S. Shenkman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25158316
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 15
p. 8316

Abstract

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The elimination of ground reaction force (support withdrawal) vastly affects slow postural muscles in terms of their regulation and structure. One of the effects of support withdrawal in this study was an immediate postural muscle inactivation, followed by the daily gradual development of spontaneous activity of the slow postural soleus muscle in response to rat hindlimb suspension to mimic space flight. The origin of this activity is somewhat akin to muscle spasticity after spinal cord injuries and is the result of KCC2 content decline in the spinal cord’s motor neurons. However, the physiological consequences of unloading-induced spontaneous activity remain unexplored. We have conducted an experiment with the administration of a highly specific KCC2 activator during 7-day unloading. For this experiment, 32 male Wistar rats were divided into 4 groups: C+placebo, C+CLP-290 (100 mg/kg b w), 7HS+placebo, and 7HS+CLP—hindlimb-suspended group with CLP-290 administration (100 mg/kg b w). The soleus muscles of the animals were dissected and analyzed for several proteostasis- and metabolism-related parameters. CLP-290 administration to the unloaded animals led to the upregulation of AMPK downstream (p-ACC) and mTOR targets (p-p70S6k and p-4E-BP) and an enhanced PGC1alpha decrease vs. the 7HS group, but neither prevented nor enhanced atrophy of the soleus muscle or myofiber CSA.

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