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Papers by Victor Lira
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 2006
Purpose: We sought to determine whether cyclooxygenase (COX) activity is necessary for overload-i... more Purpose: We sought to determine whether cyclooxygenase (COX) activity is necessary for overload-induced growth of adult rat skeletal muscle, and whether nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity is involved in upregulation of COX messenger RNA (mRNA) expression in skeletal muscle. Methods: Unilateral surgical removal of the gastrocnemius and soleus was performed on the right hindlimb of 16 female Sprague-Dawley rats (~230 g) to induce chronic overload (OL) of the plantaris for 14 d, with sham surgeries performed on the contralateral leg as a normally loaded (NL) control. Half of the rats were treated with the nonspecific COX inhibitor, ibuprofen (0.2 mgImL j1 in drinking water;~20 mgIkg j1 Id j1 ). In a second experiment, the plantaris was unilaterally overloaded for 5 or 14 d in male rats (~350 g; N = 16 rats per time point) and half of the animals were treated with the NOS inhibitor, L-NAME (0.75 mgImL j1 in drinking water;~90 mgIkg j1 Id j1 ). Results: Ibuprofen treatment inhibited plantaris hypertrophy by approximately 50% (P G 0.05) following 14 d of OL, as did L-NAME treatment (P G 0.05). COX-1 and COX-2 mRNA did not differ between any groups at 5 d. At 14 d, however, L-NAME caused a 30fold increase in plantaris COX-1 mRNA expression independent of loading condition. Additionally, OL induced a 20-fold increase in COX-2 mRNA expression compared with NL (P G 0.05) at 14 d, without affecting COX-1 mRNA level. L-NAME treatment significantly inhibited OL-induced expression of COX-2 mRNA. Conclusion: COX activity is important for in vivo muscle hypertrophy, and plantaris overload is associated with NOS activity-dependent COX-2 expression.
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 2006
Purpose: We sought to determine whether cyclooxygenase (COX) activity is necessary for overload-i... more Purpose: We sought to determine whether cyclooxygenase (COX) activity is necessary for overload-induced growth of adult rat skeletal muscle, and whether nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity is involved in upregulation of COX messenger RNA (mRNA) expression in skeletal muscle. Methods: Unilateral surgical removal of the gastrocnemius and soleus was performed on the right hindlimb of 16 female Sprague-Dawley rats (~230 g) to induce chronic overload (OL) of the plantaris for 14 d, with sham surgeries performed on the contralateral leg as a normally loaded (NL) control. Half of the rats were treated with the nonspecific COX inhibitor, ibuprofen (0.2 mgImL j1 in drinking water;~20 mgIkg j1 Id j1 ). In a second experiment, the plantaris was unilaterally overloaded for 5 or 14 d in male rats (~350 g; N = 16 rats per time point) and half of the animals were treated with the NOS inhibitor, L-NAME (0.75 mgImL j1 in drinking water;~90 mgIkg j1 Id j1 ). Results: Ibuprofen treatment inhibited plantaris hypertrophy by approximately 50% (P G 0.05) following 14 d of OL, as did L-NAME treatment (P G 0.05). COX-1 and COX-2 mRNA did not differ between any groups at 5 d. At 14 d, however, L-NAME caused a 30fold increase in plantaris COX-1 mRNA expression independent of loading condition. Additionally, OL induced a 20-fold increase in COX-2 mRNA expression compared with NL (P G 0.05) at 14 d, without affecting COX-1 mRNA level. L-NAME treatment significantly inhibited OL-induced expression of COX-2 mRNA. Conclusion: COX activity is important for in vivo muscle hypertrophy, and plantaris overload is associated with NOS activity-dependent COX-2 expression.