| Literature DB >> 23586004 |
Kasper Dideriksen1, Ann Kathrine Ryberg Sindby, Michael Krogsgaard, Peter Schjerling, Lars Holm, Henning Langberg.
Abstract
Evidence suggests that habitual loading can result in patellar tendon hypertrophy, especially at the proximal and distal parts of the patellar tendon. The underlying protein kinetic changes and its regulation remains controversial and human data, investigating this topic, are limited. The present study investigated how acute exercise affects growth factor production and collagen fractional synthetic rate in patellar tendon tissue from patients undergoing an anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction operation. The operation was performed by use of the bone-patellar tendon-bone method under spinal anesthesia. Twelve subjects were randomized to one of two groups: a control group or an exercise group (1-hr unilateral knee-extension 67% of Wmax 24 hours before operation). Two hours before the anterior cruciate ligament operation a flooding-dose of L-[1-(13)C]proline was given. Tissue from the most proximal part of the patellar tendon was obtained during the operation. Tendon collagen fractional synthetic rate and mRNA concentrations of TGF-β-1, CTGF, and type I and III collagen were measured. CTGF and type I collagen expression were higher in the exercise group compared to the control group (p < 0.05). Type III collagen expression (p = 0.11), TGF-β-1 expression (p = 0.34), and collagen fractional synthetic rate (p = 0.26) did not differ between groups. Although the expression of CTGF and type I collagen were higher, the patellar tendon collagen fractional synthetic rate was not correspondingly higher after exercise. The elevated CTGF expression in the exercise group indicates that the TGF-beta pathway could be an important link between mechanical loading and stimulation of tendon tissue type I collagen expression.Entities:
Keywords: CTGF; TGF-β-1; Tendon Collagen FSR; Type I collagen; Type III collagen
Year: 2013 PMID: 23586004 PMCID: PMC3622742 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-2-109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Subject characteristics
| Experimental group | Control | Exercise | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | |||
| Sex distribution (M/F) | 3/3 | 3/3 | - |
| Age (yrs) | 31 ± 3 | 32 ± 3 | NS |
| Height (m) | 1.73 ± 0.04 | 1.75 ± 0.05 | NS |
| Weight (kg) | 75.3 ± 4.8 | 73.5 ± 4.2 | NS |
| BMl (kg/m2) | 25.1 ± 0.9 | 23.9 ± 0.4 | NS |
| 67% of max workload (watt) | - | 44 ± 8 | - |
Data are mean ± SEM. An unpaired and two-tailed t-tests was conducted to determine group differences. NS: not significant; Control: no exercise; Exercise: 1-hr unilateral kicking at 67% of maximal workload 24 hours before trial.
Figure 1Experimental protocol for the acute studies. 750 mg 13C-proline and 3250 mg 12C-proline was injected over 3 min. Venous blood samples were drawn at 10- to 30-min intervals after the bolus injection. The tendon fractional synthetic rate (FSR) was measured over a 2 hr-period. Patellar tendon tissue was harvested during the operation. In the exercise group, a 1-hr unilateral exercise bout was completed 24 hours before tendon tissue was harvested.
Figure 2Depiction of the patellar tendon. The patellar tendon tissue obtained during the operations was located at the most proximal portion of the tendon, right next to the tendon insertion as illustrated by the black arrows.
Figure 3Mean (± SEM) venous plasma proline tracer:tracee ratio (%) enrichments throughout the fractional synthetic rate measuring period. The individual values of the area under the plasma proline enrichment curves were used for calculation of tendon collagen FSR.
Figure 4Geometric mean (± back-transformed SEM) of TGF-β-1 (A), CTGF (B), COL1A1 (C), COL3A1 (D), GAPDH (E) mRNA, normalized to RPLP0 mRNA, in Control (no bars) and Exercise (grey bars). All data are presented as fold changes between the two groups. That is the changes relative to the mean of all control values. Data were analyzed with unpaired and two-tailed t-tests. For TGF-β-1 (p = 0.34), no difference between groups was observed. Significant higher CTGF and COL1A1 mRNA levels were observed in the exercise group compared to the control group (p < 0.05). For COL3A1 (p = 0.11), the difference between groups was not significant. Control: no exercise; Exercise: 1-hr unilateral kicking at 67% of maximal workload 24 hours before trial.
Figure 5Distribution of tendon collagen protein fractional synthetic rate (FSR; %·hr) in the two groups. To illustrate female and male values, different symbols are used, ⊗ = females and O = males. An unpaired and two-tailed t-tests was conducted to determine the difference between groups. The difference between groups was not significant (p = 0.26). Control: no exercise; Exercise: 1-hr unilateral kicking at 67% of maximal workload 24 hours before trial.