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Publication : Arginine butyrate per os protects mdx mice against cardiomyopathy, kyphosis and changes in axonal excitability.

First Author  Vianello S Year  2014
Journal  Neurobiol Dis Volume  71
Pages  325-33 PubMed ID  25167832
Mgi Jnum  J:218459 Mgi Id  MGI:5617643
Doi  10.1016/j.nbd.2014.08.023 Citation  Vianello S, et al. (2014) Arginine butyrate per os protects mdx mice against cardiomyopathy, kyphosis and changes in axonal excitability. Neurobiol Dis 71:325-33
abstractText  Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a progressive neuromuscular disease caused by lack of dystrophin, a sub-sarcolemmal protein, which leads to dramatic muscle deterioration. We studied in mdx mice, the effects of oral administration of arginine butyrate (AB), a compound currently used for the treatment of sickle cell anemia in children, on cardiomyopathy, vertebral column deformation and electromyographic abnormalities. Monthly follow-up by echocardiography from the 8th month to the 14th month showed that AB treatment protected the mdx mice against drastic reduction (20-23%) of ejection fraction and fractional shortening, and also against the approximately 20% ventricular dilatation and 25% cardiac hypertrophy observed in saline-treated mdx mice. The phenotypic improvement was corroborated by the decrease in serum CK level and by better fatigue resistance. Moreover, AB treatment protected against the progressive spinal deformity observed in mdx mice, another similarity with DMD patients. The value of the kyphosis index in AB-treated mice reached 94% of the value in C57BL/10 mice. Finally, axonal excitability parameters such as the membrane resting potential, the threshold and amplitude of the action potential, the absolute and relative refractory periods and the supernormal and subnormal periods, recorded from caudal and plantar muscles in response to excitability tests, that were modified in saline-treated mdx mice were not significantly changed, compared with wild-type animals, in AB-treated mdx mice. All of these results suggest that AB could be a potential treatment for DMD patients.
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