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Role of vitamin E on bovine skeletal-muscle-derived cells from Korean native cattle under heat treatment.

Authors :
Kim, Bo-Mi
Jin, Xue-Cheng
Lee, Jun-Hee
Peng, Dong-Qiao
Kim, Won-Seob
Lee, Hong-Gu
Source :
Journal of Animal Science. 2024, Vol. 102, p1-10. 10p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Our study aimed to evaluate the dualistic effect of heat stress on muscle differentiation at different temperatures, and whether vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant, could offset any negative effects, using bovine skeletal-muscle-derived cells (BSMCs) with myogenic properties. The BSMCs were extracted from the skeletal muscle of 30-mo-old Korean native cattle and subjected to myogenic differentiation under 3 heat exposure conditions: 37 °C (control; CON), 39 °C (mild heat stress; MHS), and 41 °C (severe heat stress; SHS) for 24 h with or without vitamin E treatment (NE or VE). After 24 h treatments, the cells were returned to 37 °C incubators and differentiated until day 6. On day 1, because of the heat exposure, the gene expression of MYOG was the highest in MHS (P  = 0.047), suggesting a promotive effect of mild heat stress on myogenic differentiation, while on day 6, compared with CON and MHS, MYOD (P  = 0.013) and MYOG (P  = 0.029) were the lowest in SHS. Vitamin E treatment also lowered MYOG (P  = 0.097), regardless of heat exposure. On day 1, HSPB1 (P  = 0.001) and HSP70 (P  < 0.001) were the highest in SHS, and an interaction between heat exposure and vitamin E treatment was found on day 6 (P  < 0.027). BCL-2 was also the highest on day 1 in SHS (P  = 0.05), and an interaction of heat exposure and vitamin E treatment was found on day 1 on BAX expression (P  = 0.038). For antioxidant genes, SOD1 (P  = 0.002) and GPX1 (P  < 0.001) were affected by heat exposure, with the highest levels being observed in SHS, and on day 6, GPX1 was still the highest in SHS (P  = 0.027). The fusion index was also affected by heat exposure, showing a decrease in SHS and an increase in MHS compared with CON (P  < 0.001). Significant effects were noted from heat exposure (P  < 0.001), vitamin E treatment (P  < 0.001), and the interaction of heat exposure and vitamin E treatment (P  = 0.002) on the protein content. Taken together, our findings provide evidence that vitamin E could ameliorate the harmful effects of heat exposure by modulating heat shock proteins and apoptosis regulators, improving the protein synthesis of BSMCs during myogenic differentiation. These results suggest that vitamin E supplementation could potentially protect muscle development in beef cattle under summer heat stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00218812
Volume :
102
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Animal Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
182431856
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jas/skae292