| Literature DB >> 25432515 |
Tertius Abraham Kohn1, Timothy David Noakes2, Dale Elizabeth Rae2, Juan Carlos Rubio3, Alfredo Santalla4, Gisela Nogales-Gadea5, Tomas Pinós6, Miguel A Martín3, Joaquin Arenas3, Alejandro Lucia7.
Abstract
Patients suffering from glycogen storage disease V (McArdle disease) were shown to have higher surface electrical activity in their skeletal muscles when exercising at the same intensity as their healthy counterparts, indicating more muscle fibre recruitment. To explain this phenomenon, this study investigated whether muscle fibre type is shifted towards a predominance in type I fibres as a consequence of the disease. Muscle biopsies from the Biceps brachii (BB) (n = 9) or Vastus lateralis (VL) (n = 8) were collected over a 13-year period from male and female patients diagnosed with McArdle disease, analysed for myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform content using SDS-PAGE, and compared to healthy controls (BB: n = 3; VL: n = 10). All three isoforms were expressed and no difference in isoform expression in VL was found between the McArdle patients and healthy controls (MHC I: 33±19% vs. 43±7%; MHC IIa: 52±9% vs. 40±7%; MHC IIx: 15±18% vs. 17±9%). Similarly, the BB isoform content was also not different between the two groups (MHC I: 33±14% vs. 30±11%; MHC IIa: 46±17% vs. 39±5%; MHC IIx: 21±13% vs. 31±14%). In conclusion, fibre type distribution does not seem to explain the higher surface EMG in McArdle patients. Future studies need to investigate muscle fibre size and contractility of McArdle patients.Entities:
Keywords: Glycogen storage disease V; Myosin heavy chain; Phosphorylase deficiency
Year: 2014 PMID: 25432515 PMCID: PMC4265760 DOI: 10.1242/bio.20149548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Open ISSN: 2046-6390 Impact factor: 2.422
Fig. 1.Separation of the myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms into three distinct bands using SDS-PAGE of a control and two McArdle patients.
In each well, a total of 1 µg protein and 2.5 µg protein were loaded in the top and bottom gels, respectively.
Fig. 2.Myosin heavy chain isoform distribution in (A) Biceps brachii and (B) Vastus lateralis from healthy participants (closed circles) and patients diagnosed with McArdle disease (open circles).
Values from the literature (bars) are included for both muscle groups as reference points (Klitgaard et al., 1990b). Where appropriate, data are presented as mean ± SD.
Descriptive data of healthy control participants and McArdle patients