| Literature DB >> 28245256 |
Amy E Bryant1,2, Michael J Aldape1,3, Clifford R Bayer1, Eva J Katahira1, Laura Bond4, Carrie D Nicora5, Thomas L Fillmore5, Therese R W Clauss5, Thomas O Metz5, Bobbie-Jo Webb-Robertson5, Dennis L Stevens1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute muscle injuries are exceedingly common and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are widely consumed to reduce the associated inflammation, swelling and pain that peak 1-2 days post-injury. While prophylactic use or early administration of NSAIDs has been shown to delay muscle regeneration and contribute to loss of muscle strength after healing, little is known about the effects of delayed NSAID use. Further, NSAID use following non-penetrating injury has been associated with increased risk and severity of infection, including that due to group A streptococcus, though the mechanisms remain to be elucidated. The present study investigated the effects of delayed NSAID administration on muscle repair and sought mechanisms supporting an injury/NSAID/infection axis.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28245256 PMCID: PMC5330483 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0172486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Experimental muscle injury disrupts myofiber architecture and causes marked influx of inflammatory cells.
Mice underwent the eccentric contraction (EC) exercise regimen as described in Methods. At 24 hr post-EC, animals were euthanized and both left and right tibialis anterior (TA) muscles were harvested post-mortem for routine histopathology. One representative animal of 3 is depicted. The exercised muscle, but not the control TA, displays destruction of normal muscle architecture and a marked inflammatory cell influx. These pathologies, and the corresponding reduction in muscle force, are accepted criteria that define muscle injury.
Fig 2Experimental eccentric contraction injury stimulates physiological responses characteristic of muscle regeneration.
Mice (4-12/group) underwent the EC regimen described above. Non-injured and injured TA muscles were harvested at the indicated times post-injury, flash-frozen and used to evaluate the relative expression of genes involved in muscle regeneration by qRT-PCR as described in Methods. Data are given as the mean fold-change in gene expression relative to the non-injured muscle ± standard error of the mean (SEM). Calculation of the 95% confidence interval using the log2-transformed fold-change values revealed that all genes were significantly increased at each time point relative to the non-injured control as indicated by the grouped asterisks, except the 24h ptgs1 expression. No corresponding proteomics analyses were conducted at 24 or 48 hrs; at 54 hrs post-injury the only corresponding protein that was significantly altered by injury was vimentin (Table in S1 Table: Proteins Significantly Altered by Injury; 1.745-fold increase; p = .0236).
Dynamics and Cellular Phenotypes of Infiltrating Leukocytes after Muscle Injury.
| Time Point | CD11b+ cells/mg of TA muscle | Differential of CD11b+ cells (%) | Percent Ly-6C Positive MO/MP (M1) | Percent F4/80 Positive MO/MP (M2) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MO/MP | PMNL | Eosinophils | Other | |||||
| 24 hr | 2 | 3941 ± 347 | 42.0 ± 9.2 | 47.6 ± 8.8 | 2.1 ± 0.9 | 8.3 ± 4.5 | 42.9 ± 7.0 | 6.2 ± 2.7 |
| 48 hr | 2 | 4763 ± 544 | 65.3 ± 9.5 | 14.8 ± 9.2 | 2.9 ± 1.6 | 17.0 ± 8.5 | 20.8 ± 3.1 | 16.1 ± 6.7 |
| 54 hr + saline | 4 | 4176 ± 1204 | 68.0 ± 6.0 | 12.3 ± 5.4 | 7.0 ± 4.0 | 12.7 ± 4.5 | 16.8 ± 6.6 | 35.1 ± 5.9 |
| 54 hr + NSAID | 3 | 3736 ± 1984 | 67.8 ± 10.3 | 13.4 ± 5.9 | 3.6 ± 1.7 | 7.8 ± 6.9 | 14.8 ± 5.0 | 28.5 ± 10.6 |
Animals underwent eccentric contraction-induced muscle injury as described in Methods. TA muscles were harvested at the indicated times. Tissues harvested at 54 hr were taken from animals 7 hrs after treatment with either NSAID vehicle (saline) or the non-selective NSAID, ketorolac tromethamine, given at 47 hrs post-injury. Data are means ± SD; MO/MP = Monocyte/Macrophage, PMNL = Polymorphonuclear Leukocyte.
* Each N represents TA muscles from 3 animals.
†Other cells include lymphocytes and other unidentified cells.
No statistical differences were observed in tissues at 54 hrs in saline control vs NSAID-treated animals.
Fig 3AMT-tag proteomics identifies proteins from injured muscles that are significantly altered by NSAID treatment.
(A) Proteins that met both the criteria of “Coverage” (defined as: [Number of paired injured and control muscles ≥ 50% or (N(injured) or N(control)) ≥75%]) and of “Difference” (defined as: [|Fold Change| ≥1.25 or |N(injured)—N(control)| ≥ 50%)]) were subjected to statistical analysis to identify those that were significantly affected by NSAID treatment. Proteins were analyzed for quantitative effects using a standard T-test and for qualitative effects using G-test methodology [32]. In total, 277 differentially expressed proteins were found to be significantly altered by NSAID administration. (B) Functional categories of the 277 differentially expressed proteins (assigned as described in Methods; Table in S2 Table: Proteins Significantly Altered by NSAID) are depicted. PTM: post-translational modification; ECM: extracellular matrix.
Common proteins significantly altered by injury and by NSAID administration.
| ID | Protein Name | Accession | Functional Category | Function | Response to | Response to |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GCP2 | Gamma-tubulin complex component 2 | Q921G8 | Cell cycle control | Involved in microtubule nucleation at the centrosome | down | up |
| ATLA2 | Atlastin-2 | Q6PA06 | Non-muscle cell specific biogenesis | GTPase that functions in endoplasmic reticulum tubular network biogenesis | down | up |
| GLRX5 | Glutaredoxin-related protein 5; mitochondrial | Q80Y14 | Apoptosis-related | Involved in iron homeostasis; protects against ROS-induced apoptosis | up | down |
| FIS1 | Mitochondrial fission 1 protein | Q9CQ92 | Cell cycle control | Involved in mitochondrial fission during cell replication | up | down |
| K2C7 | Keratin; type II cytoskeletal 7 | Q9DCV7 | Cell cycle control | Blocks interferon-dependent interphase and stimulates DNA synthesis | up | down |
| ARFG1 | ADP-ribosylation factor GTPase-activating protein 1 | Q9EPJ9 | Intracellular trafficking | Involved in membrane trafficking and vesicle transport | up | down |
| ALBU | Serum albumin | P07724 | Metabolism & Transport | Main protein of plasma | up | down |
| EST1C | Carboxylesterase 1C | P23953 | Metabolism & Transport | A carboxylesterase | up | down |
| ESTD | S-formylglutathione hydrolase | Q9R0P3 | Metabolism & Transport | Thioester hydrolase | up | down |
| ACYP2 | Acylphosphatase-2; muscle type isozyme | P56375 | Muscle cell specific biogenesis | Acylphosphatase targeting the Ca2+/Mg2+-ATPase from sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal muscle; increased with muscle differentiation | up | down |
| FHL3 | Four and a half LIM domains protein 3 | Q9R059 | Muscle cell specific biogenesis | A novel alpha7/beta1 integrin-interacting protein | up | down |
| DPYL2 | Dihydropyrimidinase-related protein 2 | O08553 | Non-muscle cell specific biogenesis | Plays a role in neuronal development and polarity | up | down |
| K2C8 | Keratin; type II cytoskeletal 8 | P11679 | Non-muscle cell specific biogenesis | Helps link the contractile apparatus to dystrophin at muscle costameres | up | down |
| MOES | Moesin | P26041 | Non-muscle cell specific biogenesis | Probably connect major cytoskeletal structures to the plasma membrane | up | down |
| ACBP | Acyl-CoA-binding protein | P31786 | Signal transduction | Intracellular carrier of acyl-CoA esters | up | down |
| DYSF | Dysferlin | Q9ESD7 | Signal transduction | Key Ca++ sensor involved in sarcolemma repair after mechanical stress injury | up | down |
| CES1D | Carboxylesterase 1D | Q8VCT4 | Metabolism & Transport | Major lipase in white adipose tissue | up | up |
| EST1 | Liver carboxylesterase 1 | Q8VCC2 | Metabolism & Transport | Liver detoxification enzyme. | up | up |
| CYTB | Cystatin-B | Q62426 | Non-muscle cell specific biogenesis | An intracellular thiol proteinase | up | up |
| DNJA2 | DnaJ homolog subfamily A member 2 | Q9QYJ0 | Protein folding/chaperone | Co-chaperone of Hsc70 | up | up |
| ELOC | Transcription elongation factor B polypeptide 1 | P83940 | Transcription | Aka elongin; a general transcription elongation factor | up | up |
| HNRPC | Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins C1/C2 | Q9Z204 | Translation | Binds pre-mRNA and nucleates the assembly of 40S hnRNP particles | up | up |
Comparison of protein profiles in “Non-Injured vs Injured TA muscles in vehicle-treated mice” and in “TA muscles from injured mice treated with or without NSAID” revealed 22 shared proteins that were significantly altered in both groups. Most proteins (91%) were significantly increased by injury and were involved in metabolism, biogenesis and survival. In 16 of 22 cases (73%), NSAID administration reversed the injury-induced response.
Fig 4IPA reveals “Cell Death and Survival” as the major biofunction affected by NSAID administration after muscle injury.
Heat maps of biological functions in which significantly altered proteins were associated with NSAID administration. Color scale is based on z-score with orange indicating predicted activation and blue indicating inhibition. : Global view of all returned biofunctions. : Enlarged view of “Cell Death and Survival” showing “Cell Death of Muscle Cells” (white star), “Necrosis of Muscle” (yellow star) and “Cell Survival” (blue star).
IPA predicts an NSAID-induced Increase in Cell Death and a Reduction in Proliferation/Survival in Regenerating TA Muscles.
| Diseases or Functions Annotation | p-Value | Predicted Activation State | Activation z-score | # Molecules | Molecules |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Necrosis of Muscle | 2.15E-06 | Increased | 2.729 | 19 | ALDOA, APIP, BAG1, CACNB2, CALR, COL6A1, CYCS, DYSF, EEF1A2, EEF1D, HK1, HSPB6, HSPE1, MDH1, MYH4, MYH6, RAF1, TNNT1, TPT1 |
| Cell Death of Muscle | 2.30E-05 | Increased | 3.085 | 17 | ALDOA, APIP, BAG1, CACNB2, CALR, CYCS, DYSF, EEF1A2, EEF1D, HK1, HSPB6, HSPE1, MDH1, MYH4, RAF1, TNNT1, TPT1 |
| Proliferation of Cells | 6.72E-07 | Decreased | -2.721 | 103 | ACTN1, AHCY, AIMP1, AKR1B1, AKR1B10, ALB, ALDOA, ANXA1, ANXA2, ANXA6, ARAF, BAG1, BIN1, BRAF, C3, CACNA1D, CACNA1S, CACNB3, CALR, CAPZA1, CCT2, CFL1, CNBP, CNPY2, COL4A2, COL6A1, COL6A2, CSNK1D, CSRP3, CTSD, DBI, DES, DLST, DNAJA2, DPYSL2, EEF1D, EIF5A, EIF5A2, EML1, ETFB, EZR, F2, FBN2, FHL1, FIS1, GPX3, HK1, HNRNPC, HNRNPD, HSPA4, HSPA5, HSPB6, ITGB1, KRT7, KRT8, LAMB2, LAP3, MYH10, MYH6, MYH7, NACA, NDRG2, NME1, NUDCD3, PDIA3, PEBP1, PKM, PPIA, PPIB, PPP1CA, PPP1CB, PPP2CA, PRDX1, PRPH, PSMC4, PTGES3, RAF1, RPS14, RPS19, SERPINA1, SERPINA3, Serpina3g (includes others), SERPINC1, SPEG, SPTAN1, TAGLN, TAGLN2, TF, Tmsb4x (includes others), TPT1, TTR, TUBB, TUBB2A, TUBB3, TUBB4B, TXN2, TXNDC5, UBE2L3, USMG5, VCP, VIM, YBX3, YWHAZ |
| Cell Survival | 2.08E-04 | Decreased | -3.339 | 43 | AIMP1, ALB, BAG1, BRAF, C3, CACNB3, CALR, EEF2, EIF2S1, EZR, F2, GLUD1, HK3, HSPA4, HSPA5, HSPB6, ITGB1, KHK, NDRG2, NME1, PDIA3, PKLR, PKM, PPIA, PPIB, PPP1CA, PPP1CB, PPP2CA, PRDX6, PRPH, PSMC4, RAF1, RPL38, TPT1, TUBB, TUBB3, TUBB4A, TXNDC5, UBE2L3, USMG5, VCP, VIM, YWHAZ |
Fig 5NSAID-induced decrease in anti-apoptosis proteins is associated with increased caspase activity.
Caspase 3/7activity in muscle homogenates from saline- and NSAID-treated animals (4/group) was measured at 54 hrs after injury (7 hrs post-treatment) by commercial ELISA. Data are given as the fold-change for each animal relative to its own non-injured TA muscle. Responses between saline versus NSAID-treated animals were statistically significant as determined by ANOVA using a mixed model with random effect of animal within treatment with the level of significance set at p < .05.