| Literature DB >> 33237943 |
Anandita Ananthakumar1, Yiling Liu2, Cristina E Fernandez1, George A Truskey1, Deepak Voora2.
Abstract
Statins are used to lower cholesterol and prevent cardiovascular disease. Musculoskeletal side effects known as statin associated musculoskeletal symptoms (SAMS), are reported in up to 10% of statin users, necessitating statin therapy interruption and increasing cardiovascular disease risk. We tested the hypothesis that, when exposed to statins ex vivo, engineered human skeletal myobundles derived from individuals with (n = 10) or without (n = 14) SAMS and elevated creatine-kinase levels exhibit statin-dependent muscle defects. Myoblasts were derived from muscle biopsies of individuals (median age range of 62-64) with hyperlipidemia with (n = 10) or without (n = 14) SAMS. Myobundles formed from myoblasts were cultured with growth media for 4 days, low amino acid differentiation media for 4 days, then dosed with 0 and 5μM of statins for 5 days. Tetanus forces were subsequently measured. To model the change of tetanus forces among clinical covariates, a mixed effect model with fixed effects being donor type, statin concentration, statin type and their two way interactions (donor type*statin concentration and donor type* statin type) and the random effect being subject ID was applied. The results indicate that statin exposure significantly contributed to decrease in force (P<0.001) and the variability in data (R2C [R square conditional] = 0.62). We found no significant differences in force between myobundles from patients with/without SAMS, many of whom had chronic diseases. Immunofluorescence quantification revealed a positive correlation between the number of straited muscle fibers and tetanus force (R2 = 0.81,P = 0.015) and negative correlation between number of fragmented muscle fibers and tetanus force (R2 = 0.482,P = 0.051) with no differences between donors with or without SAMS. There is also a correlation between statin exposure and presence of striated fibers (R2 = 0.833, P = 0.047). In patient-derived myobundles, statin exposure results in myotoxicity disrupting SAA organization and reducing force. We were unable to identify differences in ex vivo statin myotoxicity in this system. The results suggest that it is unlikely that there is inherent susceptibility to or persistent effects of statin myopathy using patient-derived myobundles.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33237943 PMCID: PMC7688150 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0242422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1A) Culture Protocol: B) Average tetanus force of all control donors. Significant difference seen between 0 (VC) and 5μM of statin concentration. * = P = 0.012 {Data are reported as mean ±SEM, n = 3–4 biological replicates per condition with 14 control donors} C) Average tetanus force of all case donors. Significant difference is seen between 0(VC) and 5μM of statin concentration. * = P = 0.040 {Data are reported as mean ±SEM, n = 3–4 biological replicates per condition with 12 case donors}.
Fig 2A) Predicted average tetanus values vs actual values for average of tetanus values from all donors in protocol II. B) P values of the individual and interaction effects.
Fig 4A) Positive correlation between striated fibers/total number of nuclei in image field and tetanus force (P = 0.015). B) Negative correlation between fragmented fibers/number of nuclei in fragmented fibers and tetanus force (P = 0.051).
Fig 3Representative immunofluorescence images of donors along with their tetanus force production.
Yellow Arrows (Striated Fiber), Blue Arrows (Fragmented Fibers). A) Striated muscle fibers (control donor dosed with simvastatin) are correlated with higher force production when compared to B) Case donor dosed with simvastatin which had reduced number of straited fibers. Increased fragmented fibers are seen in C) control donor and less striated fibers are seen in D) case donor dosed with Atorvastatin which is correlated to their tetanus force production.