1.The elusive role of myostatin signaling for muscle regeneration and maintenance of muscle and bone homeostasis
Akash MITRA ; Rizwan QAISAR ; Bipasha BOSE ; Sudheer SHENOY P
Osteoporosis and Sarcopenia 2023;9(1):1-7
Skeletal muscle is one of the leading frameworks of the musculo-skeletal system, which works in synergy with the bones. Long skeletal muscles provide stability and mobility to the human body and are primarily composed of proteins. Conversely, improper functioning of various skeletal muscles leads to diseases and disorders, namely, age-related muscle disorders called sarcopenia, a group of genetic muscle disorders such as muscular dystrophies, and severe muscle wasting in cancer known as cachexia. However, skeletal muscle has an excellent ability to undergo hypertrophy and enhanced functioning during sustained exercise over time. Indeed, these processes of skeletal muscle regeneration/hypertrophy, as well as degeneration and atrophy, involve an interplay of various signaling pathways. Myostatin is one such chemokine/myokine with a significant contribution to muscle regeneration or atrophy in multiple conditions. In this review, we try to put together the role and regulation of myostatin as a function of muscle regeneration extrapolated to multiple aspects of its molecular functions.
2.Is the myonuclear domain ceiling hypothesis dead?
Ferdos AMAN ; Eman EL KHATIB ; Alanood ALNEAIMI ; Ahmed MOHAMED ; Alya Sultan ALMULLA ; Amna ZAIDAN ; Jana ALSHAFEI ; Omar HABBAL ; Salma ELDESOUKI ; Rizwan QAISAR
Singapore medical journal 2023;64(7):415-422
Muscle fibres are multinuclear cells, and the cytoplasmic territory where a single myonucleus controls transcriptional activity is called the myonuclear domain (MND). MND size shows flexibility during muscle hypertrophy. The MND ceiling hypothesis states that hypertrophy results in the expansion of MND size to an upper limit or MND ceiling, beyond which additional myonuclei via activation of satellite cells are required to support further growth. However, the debate about the MND ceiling hypothesis is far from settled, and various studies show conflicting results about the existence or otherwise of MND ceiling in hypertrophy. The aim of this review is to summarise the literature about the MND ceiling in various settings of hypertrophy and discuss the possible factors contributing to a discrepancy in the literature. We conclude by describing the physiological and clinical significance of the MND ceiling limit in the muscle adaptation process in various physiological and pathological conditions.
Humans
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Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/physiology*
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Hypertrophy/pathology*
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Muscle, Skeletal