Title of article :
Accelerated skeletal muscle recovery after in vivo polyphenol administration
Author/Authors :
Kathryn H. Myburgh، نويسنده , , Maria J. Kruger، نويسنده , , Carine Smith، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
8
From page :
1072
To page :
1079
Abstract :
Acute skeletal muscle damage results in fiber disruption, oxidative stress and inflammation. We investigated cell-specific contributions to the regeneration process after contusion-induced damage (rat gastrocnemius muscle) with or without chronic grape seed-derived proanthocyanidolic oligomer (PCO) administration. In this placebo-controlled study, male Wistar rats were subjected to PCO administration for 2 weeks, after which they were subjected to a standardised contusion injury. Supplementation was continued after injury. Immune and satellite cell responses were assessed, as well as oxygen radical absorption capacity and muscle regeneration. PCO administration resulted in a rapid satellite cell response with an earlier peak in activation (Pax7+, CD56+, at 4 h post-contusion) vs. placebo groups (PLA) (P<.001: CD56+ on Day 5 and Pax7+ on Day 7). Specific immune-cell responses in PLA followed expected time courses (neutrophil elevation on Day 1; sustained macrophage elevation from Days 3 to 5). PCO dramatically decreased neutrophil elevation to nonsignificant, while macrophage responses were normal in extent, but significantly earlier (peak between Days 1 and 3) and completely resolved by Day 5. Anti-inflammatory cytokine, IL-10, increased significantly only in PCO (Day 3). Muscle fiber regeneration (MHCf content and central nuclei) started earlier and was complete by Day 14 in PCO, but not in PLA. Thus, responses by three crucial cell types involved in muscle recovery were affected by in vivo administration of a specific purified polyphenol in magnitude (neutrophil), time course (macrophages), or time course and activation state (satellite cell), explaining faster effective regeneration in the presence of proanthocyanidolic oligomers.
Keywords :
Grape seed , Inflammation , Satellite cell activation , Proanthocyanidin
Journal title :
The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
Record number :
1300017
Link To Document :
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