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Publication : Branched fibers from old fast-twitch dystrophic muscles are the sites of terminal damage in muscular dystrophy.

First Author  Kiriaev L Year  2018
Journal  Am J Physiol Cell Physiol Volume  314
Issue  6 Pages  C662-C674
PubMed ID  29412689 Mgi Jnum  J:262824
Mgi Id  MGI:6160143 Doi  10.1152/ajpcell.00161.2017
Citation  Kiriaev L, et al. (2018) Branched fibers from old fast-twitch dystrophic muscles are the sites of terminal damage in muscular dystrophy. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 314(6):C662-C674
abstractText  A striking pathological feature of dystrophinopathies is the presence of morphologically abnormal branched skeletal muscle fibers. The deterioration of muscle contractile function in Duchenne muscular dystrophy is accompanied by both an increase in number and complexity of these branched fibers. We propose that when number and complexity of branched fibers reaches a critical threshold, or "tipping point," the branches in and of themselves are the site of contraction-induced rupture. In the present study, we use the dystrophic mdx mouse and littermate controls to study the prediseased dystrophic fast-twitch extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle at 2-3 wk, the peak myonecrotic phase at 6-9 wk, and finally, "old," at 58-112 wk. Using a combination of isolated muscle function contractile measurements coupled with single-fiber imaging and confocal microscope imaging of cleared whole muscles, we identified a distinct pathophysiology, acute fiber rupture at branch nodes, which occurs in "old" fast-twitch EDL muscle approaching the end stage of the dystrophinopathy muscle disease, where the EDL muscles are entirely composed of complexed branched fibers. This evidence supports our concept of "tipping point" where the number and extent of fiber branching reach a level where the branching itself terminally compromises muscle function, irrespective of the absence of dystrophin.
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