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The Expression of MMP-2 Following Immobilization and High-Intensity Running in Plantaris Muscle Fiber in Rats
Author(s) -
Eli Carmeli,
Tal Gal Haimovitch
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
the scientific world journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.453
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 2356-6140
pISSN - 1537-744X
DOI - 10.1100/tsw.2006.107
Subject(s) - plantaris muscle , glycolysis , treadmill , chemistry , muscle fibre , oxidative phosphorylation , intensity (physics) , medicine , endocrinology , fiber type , matrix metalloproteinase , anatomy , zoology , skeletal muscle , metabolism , biology , biochemistry , soleus muscle , physics , quantum mechanics
The effect of 2-week, high-intensity running and a 2-week immobilization on muscle fiber type composition of the plantaris muscle from 18 female, 6-month-old Wistar rats (running, n = 6; immobilization, n = 6; sedentary control, n = 6) was bio- and histochemically investigated. The high-intensity treadmill running began with 20 min (32 m/min, 0% gradient, 75% VO2 max), up to 50 min/day. Right hind limbs were immobilized by an external fixation procedure for 13 days. Muscle mass of the plantaris muscle in the immobilized groups was reduced by 16% in comparison with the sedentary control group. High-intensity running and immobilization increased both mRNA and protein levels of matrix metalloproteinase type 2 (MMP-2) in plantaris. Running and immobilization decreased the percentages of transverse sectional area of fast-twitch glycolytic (FG) type IIb fibers, running increased relative cross-sectional area of fast-twitch oxidative glycolytic (FOG) type IIa muscle fibers, whereas immobilization increased relative cross-sectional area of slow-twitch oxidative (SO) muscle fibers (type I). Our results suggest that both high-intensity running and immobilization are enough to induce overwhelming changes in plantaris.

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