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Regulation of Satellite Cells and Myogenesis in Response to Eccentric Resistance Exercise in Hypoxia

U

Université Catholique de Louvain

Status

Completed

Conditions

Satellite Cells
Hypoxia
Myogenesis
Exercise

Treatments

Device: Normoxia
Procedure: Vastus lateralis biopsy
Device: Hypoxia
Procedure: Blood samples
Device: Blood flow restriction
Device: Resistance exercise on an isokinetic dynamometer

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07341165
SCHYPECC

Details and patient eligibility

About

Satellite cells (SC) are muscle stem cells that once activated, proliferate, and differentiate into myocytes that finally fuse with an existing myofiber to regenerate or increase its mass. This process is called 'myogenesis'. Satellite cell activation can be modulated by exercise and by hypoxia. Hypoxia is a state of lower availability of oxygen that can be reached either by going at high altitude (hypobaric hypoxia) or by lowering the percentage of oxygen in hypoxic rooms at sea level. In opposition to the previously described systemic hypoxia, local hypoxia can be reached placing a cuff around a limb, which will induce a partial vascular occlusion. The latter is termed as blood flow restriction (BFR). In addition, in response to physical exercise, a local intramuscular hypoxia can be found back in the skeletal muscle. Myogenesis has been shown to be modulated by hypoxia in different ways, depending on the level of hypoxia: in conditions of mild hypoxia, satellite cell proliferation appears to be favorized, whereas SC differentiation is decreased in those conditions. In conditions of severe hypoxia, SC quiescence is promoted. SC activation increases in response to resistance training, with and without BFR. Some recent data also suggest that resistance exercise in hypoxic rooms may modulate SC activation, but this area is less well understood. Eccentric exercise may enhance SC activation in comparison to concentric contraction. Up to now, no study has analyzed SC activation and myogenesis in response to an eccentric exercise in hypoxia. Whereas macroscopic differences such as higher muscle force gains or hypertrophy, have been observed between normoxic and hypoxic resistance training, but could not be explained by the classical protein balance and growth factors, there is a need for a better understanding of the muscle response in hypoxia and several studies suggest a role of satellite cells and myogenesis in that difference. The purpose of this study is to elucidate whether or not satellite cells are regulated in a different way in response to an eccentric exercise in hypoxia comparing to normoxia. In addition, differences in SC activation between environmental normobaric hypoxia and BFR, two methods used to reach hypoxia at sea level, are not well understood yet. Finally, most of the studies evaluating myogenic response following a resistance exercise have only taken samples at two time-points, before and 24h after exercise in most of the cases. As the different steps of the myogenic process evolves over the days and may be enhanced or inhibited by hypoxic conditions, multiple time-points would be interesting to observe the evolution of the myogenic process. In that purpose, blood and skeletal muscle samples will be taken at different time-points to evaluate the progress of myogenesis following an acute eccentric exercise. Myogenic regulatory factors will be analyzed by RT-qPCR (mRNA), Western-Blot (protein) and immunofluorescence (localization). In addition, factors able to regulate myogenesis such as muscle damage, inflammation, growth factors, early-regulated genes, MAPK… will also be analyzed in order to understand if they play a role in response to hypoxic conditions.

Enrollment

38 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

20 to 49 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Healthy man
  • Aged between 20 and 49 years
  • Physically active
  • Not involved in resistance training,
  • No exposed to high altitude (>1500m) 1 month before experiment

Exclusion criteria

  • Intake of AINS,
  • Illness with altered inflammatory status,
  • Condition that prohibits resistance exercise (muscle injury) or the sampling of tissue biopsies (aspirin, anticoagulants, allergy to lidocaine)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

38 participants in 3 patient groups

Resistance exercise in normoxia
Active Comparator group
Description:
Group that performed the resistance exercise in normoxia (FiO2=0.21)
Treatment:
Device: Resistance exercise on an isokinetic dynamometer
Procedure: Blood samples
Procedure: Vastus lateralis biopsy
Device: Normoxia
Resistance exercise in hypoxia
Experimental group
Description:
Group that performed the resistance exercise in hypoxia (FiO2=0.14)
Treatment:
Device: Resistance exercise on an isokinetic dynamometer
Procedure: Blood samples
Device: Hypoxia
Procedure: Vastus lateralis biopsy
Resistance exercise with blood flow restriction
Experimental group
Description:
Group that performed the resistance exercise with blood flow restriction (60%AOP)
Treatment:
Device: Resistance exercise on an isokinetic dynamometer
Device: Blood flow restriction
Procedure: Blood samples
Procedure: Vastus lateralis biopsy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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