Abstract

Extended periods of skeletal muscle disuse results in muscle atrophy and weakness. Currently, no therapeutic treatment is available for the prevention of this problem. Nonetheless, growing evidence suggests that prevention of disuse-induced oxidative stress in inactive muscle fibers can delay inactivity-induced muscle wasting. Therefore, this study tested the hypothesis that dietary supplementation with the antioxidant astaxanthin would protect against disuse muscle atrophy, in part, by prevention of myonuclear apoptosis. Wistar rats (8 weeks old) were divided into control (CT, n=9), hindlimb unloading (HU, n=9), and hindlimb unloading with astaxanthin (HU+AX, n=9) groups. Following 2weeks of dietary supplementation, rats in the HU and HU+AX groups were exposed to unloading for 7days. Seven-day unloading resulted in reduced soleus muscle weight and myofiber cross-sectional area (CSA) by~30 and~47%, respectively. Nonetheless, relative muscle weights and CSA of the soleus muscle in the HU+AX group were significantly greater than those of the HU group. Moreover, astaxanthin prevented disuse-induced increase in the number of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL)-positive nuclei. We conclude that astaxanthin supplementation prior to and during hindlimb unloading attenuates soleus muscle atrophy, in part, by suppressing myonuclear apoptosis.

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