Literature DB >> 12194014

Effect of age and cold exposure on morphofunctional characteristics of skeletal muscle in neonatal pigs.

Patrick Herpin1, Gaëlle Lossec, Isabelle Schmidt, Frédérique Cohen-Adad, Claude Duchamp, Louis Lefaucheur, Fernando Goglia, Antonia Lanni.   

Abstract

Muscular changes accompanying and/or promoting the rapid postnatal improvement of the thermogenic efficiency of shivering were investigated in piglets. Animals were obtained at birth or killed after 5 days at thermoneutrality (34-30 degrees C) or in the cold (24-15 degrees C), to stimulate intense shivering thermogenesis. Fast-twitch-glycolytic (longissimus lumborum) and slow-twitch-oxidative (rhomboid) muscles were prepared for electron microscopic examination and chemical measurements. Muscle-specific changes in energy stores and metabolism were observed after birth, including the switch from glycogen to lipids and variation of the lactate/pyruvate ratio corresponding to the progressive acquisition of the metabolic type of the mature muscles. There was major age-related and/or cold-induced development of the structures involved in excitation-contraction coupling (triadic profiles, +80% in the cold), oxidative metabolism (number of lipid droplets, +81% with age in the cold; number of mitochondria, +29% with age or cold; surface of mitochondrial inner membranes, +18% with age and +32% in the cold) and contraction potential (myofibril volume, +62% with age). In contrast, neither age nor cold affected capillary volume density and capillary-to-fibre ratio. The observed changes reflect the immaturity and remarkable plasticity of piglet skeletal muscle and are likely to underlie its enhanced capacity for shivering thermogenesis after birth.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12194014     DOI: 10.1007/s00424-002-0867-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pflugers Arch        ISSN: 0031-6768            Impact factor:   3.657


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