Islamabad, Jan 31 : We take it
for granted, but the fact that our muscles grow when we work them makes them
rather unique.
Now, researchers have identified a key ingredient needed
for that bulking up to take place. A factor produced in working muscle fibers
apparently tells surrounding muscle stem cell "higher ups" that it's time to
multiply and join in, according to a study in the January Cell Metabolism, a
Cell Press journal.
In other words, that so-called serum response factor
(Srf) translates the mechanical signal of work into a chemical one.
"This
signal from the muscle fiber controls stem cell behavior and participation in
muscle growth," says Athanassia Sotiropoulos of Inserm in France. "It is
unexpected and quite interesting." It might also lead to new ways to combat
muscle atrophy.
Sotiropoulos' team became interested in Srf's role in
muscle in part because their earlier studies in mice and humans showed that Srf
concentrations decline with age. That led them to think Srf might be a culprit
in the muscle atrophy so common in aging.
The new findings support that
view, but Srf doesn't work in the way the researchers had anticipated. Srf was
known to control many other genes within muscle fibers. That Srf also influences
the activities of the satellite stem cells came as a surprise.
Mice with
muscle fibers lacking Srf are no longer able to grow when they are
experimentally overloaded, the new research shows. That's because satellite
cells don't get the message to proliferate and fuse with those pre-existing
myofibers.
Srf works through a network of genes, including one known as
Cox2. That raises the intriguing possibility that commonly used Cox2 inhibitors
-- think ibuprofen -- might work against muscle growth or recovery, Sotiropoulos
notes.
Treatments designed to tweak this network of factors might be used
to wake muscle stem cells up and enhance muscle growth in circumstances such as
aging or following long periods of bed rest, she says. Most likely, such
therapies would be more successfully directed not at Srf itself, which has
varied roles, but at its targets.
"It may be difficult to find a
beneficial amount of Srf," she says. "Its targets, interleukins and
prostaglandins, may be easier to manipulate."
Ends
SA/EN
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How work tells muscles to grow
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