Abstract

Reduced skeletal loading leads to muscle atrophy in humans and most mammals. By contrast, hibernating mammals demonstrate limited loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength by the end of winter after being physically inactive for several months. The present study objective was to establish potential underlying processes for the lack of muscle loss during the hibernation season of arctic ground squirrels (AGS). Our hypothesis was that early in the the hibernation season, protective mechanisms of AGS are not yet mobilized and muscles show signs of atrophy, while compensatory processes for preventing muscle loss appear at a later time point. Quadriceps muscles of juvenile male AGS were collected shortly before hibernation, and on 2, 6, 10-12 and 16-22 weeks during hibernation. Pre-hibernating animals were used as controls. Fiber cross-sectional area (CSA) and fiber type composition were determined with immunohistochemistry. Amount of total RNA, ribosomal RNA content and expression levels of genes involved in 2 pathways of protein degradation, ubiquitination and autophagy, were analyzed by real-time PCR, to evaluate molecular mechanisms of muscle maintenance. One-Way ANOVA was used to statistically analyze the group differences. We found that CSA was not different between the groups (P > 0.05). CSA frequency distribution curves did not reveal any shift to a smaller or larger size range. No difference was detected in myofiber composition between the hibernation groups compared to the control. Total RNA and ribosomal RNA content were not significantly different between the groups during hibernation. Muscle atrophy marker FBXO32 (Atrogin-1, MAFBX) and autophagy related genes MAP1LC3A and BECN1 did not show different level of expression between the groups. Only another muscle atrophy marker TRIM63 (MURF-1, Iris Ring Finger Protein) was significantly over-expressed at the time point of 2 weeks of hibernation. These results indicate that throughout the hibernation season, AGS preserve muscle fiber CSA showing limited signs of muscle atrophy only during the first weeks of hibernation, and yet-to-be determined processes exist to suppress protein degradation in AGS muscles during hibernation. The work was supported by Center of Biomedical Research Excellence under grant number [P20GM130443]. This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.

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