Literature DB >> 17867927

Excitability of skeletal muscle during development, denervation, and tissue culture.

Robert G Dennis1, Douglas E Dow.   

Abstract

A quantitative understanding of the bulk excitability of skeletal muscle tissues is important for the design of muscle tissue bioreactor systems, implantable muscle stimulators, and other systems where electrical pulses are employed to elicit contractions in muscle tissue both in vitro and in vivo. The purpose of the present study is to systematically compare the excitability of mammalian (rat) skeletal muscle under a range of conditions (including neonatal development, denervation, and chronic in vivo stimulation of denervated muscle) and of self-organized muscle tissue constructs engineered in vitro from both primary cells and cell lines. Excitability is represented by rheobase (R(50), units = V/mm) and chronaxie (C(50), units = microseconds) values, with lower values for each indicating greater excitability. Adult skeletal muscle is the most excitable (R(50) ~ 0.29, C(50) ~ 100); chronically denervated whole muscles (R(50) ~ 2.54, C(50) ~ 690) and muscle engineered in vitro from cell lines (C2C12 + 10T1/2) (R(50) ~ 1.93, C(50) ~ 416) have exceptionally low excitability; muscle engineered in vitro from primary myocytes (R(50) ~ 0.99, C(50) ~ 496) has excitability similar to that of day 14 neonatal rat muscle (R(50) ~ 0.65, C(50) ~ 435); stimulated-denervated muscles retain excellent excitability when chronically electrically stimulated (R(50) ~ 0.40, C(50) ~ 100); and neonatal rat muscle excitability improves during the first 6 weeks of development, steadily approaching that of adult muscle.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17867927     DOI: 10.1089/ten.2006.0367

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tissue Eng        ISSN: 1076-3279


  6 in total

1.  Sodium channel Na(V)1.5 expression is enhanced in cultured adult rat skeletal muscle fibers.

Authors:  J Morel; F Rannou; H Talarmin; M A Giroux-Metges; J P Pennec; G Dorange; G Gueret
Journal:  J Membr Biol       Date:  2010-06-02       Impact factor: 1.843

2.  Producing organs in the laboratory.

Authors:  Mark E Furth; Anthony Atala
Journal:  Curr Urol Rep       Date:  2008-11       Impact factor: 3.092

3.  Tissue engineering: current strategies and future directions.

Authors:  Jennifer L Olson; Anthony Atala; James J Yoo
Journal:  Chonnam Med J       Date:  2011-04-26

4.  Changes of myogenic reactive oxygen species and interleukin-6 in contracting skeletal muscle cells.

Authors:  Hongying Pan; Xiaoyang Xu; Xuanming Hao; Yajun Chen
Journal:  Oxid Med Cell Longev       Date:  2012-05-14       Impact factor: 6.543

Review 5.  Tissue-Engineered Skeletal Muscle Models to Study Muscle Function, Plasticity, and Disease.

Authors:  Alastair Khodabukus
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2021-02-26       Impact factor: 4.566

6.  High-throughput, real-time monitoring of engineered skeletal muscle function using magnetic sensing.

Authors:  Alec St Smith; Shawn M Luttrell; Jean-Baptiste Dupont; Kevin Gray; Daniel Lih; Jacob W Fleming; Nathan J Cunningham; Sofia Jepson; Jennifer Hesson; Julie Mathieu; Lisa Maves; Bonnie J Berry; Elliot C Fisher; Nathan J Sniadecki; Nicholas A Geisse; David L Mack
Journal:  J Tissue Eng       Date:  2022-09-02       Impact factor: 7.940

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.