2 resultados para Muscle Fibers, Skeletal -- immunology

em Digital Commons at Florida International University


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The coordinated beating of the heart depends on a group ofhighly specialized cells that constitute the cardiac conduction system. Among these cells, the Purkinje fibers are responsible for propagation of the electric impulse into the ventricles. In early stages of development, Purkinje fibers and skeletal muscle fibers originate from similar but separate populations of myocytes. The role of the MyoD family of transcription factors in the development of the myotube is well known, but the role of these factors in the development of the Purkinje fiber is not. Members of the T-Box family of transcription.The coordinated beating of the heart depends on a group ofhighly specialized cells that constitute the cardiac conduction system. Among these cells, the Purkinje fibers are responsible for propagation of the electric impulse into the ventricles. In early stages of development, Purkinje fibers and skeletal muscle fibers originate from similar but separate populations of myocytes. The role of the MyoD family of transcription factors in the development of the myotube is well known, but the role of these factors in the development of the Purkinje fiber is not. Members of the T-Box family of transcription factors are also involved in the development of various cardiac tissues, including the conduction system but little is known about their role in the development of the Purkinje fiber. We explored the expression of members of the MyoD and T-Box families in the developing cardiac conduction system in vivo and in vitro. We showed that the expression of these factors changes as the myocyte differentiates into the Purkinje fiber. We also showed that NRG-1, a secreted protein involved in the development of the Purkinje fiber, features a dose-dependent response in the differentiation of cultured ventricular myocytes.

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Mice (30+-3 days old) were exposed to hypergravity (4G, one hour/day). Cross-sections of ankle extensor muscles stained immunohistochemically against slow myosin (MHC) determined if hypergravity affects the distribution of slow muscle fibers. Comparisons (ANOVA) between exposed and unexposed animals show hypergravity causes increases in slow fiber density in soleus after fourteen (p=0.049) and thirty day (p=0.Ol9) exposures. Therefore, loading may induce faster development of soleus through increased slow fiber density. Slow fibers increase in plantaris in males after seven (p=0.008) and in females after fourteen days (p=0.003), suggesting hypergravity delays normal elimination of slow fibers. Lateral and intermediate heads of lateral gastrocnemius (LG) show greater numbers of slow fibers, overall, in exposed mice (p=0.003 both). A proximal compartment of LG (LGp) and medial gastrocnemius (MG) are minimally affected by hypergravity. In LGp, only males exposed for fourteen days show decreased slow fiber density (p=0.047), but MG increased slow fiber numbers in exposed females compared to controls (p=0.04).