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Accumulation of Skeletal Muscle T Cells and the Repeated Bout Effect in Rats.

Authors :
Deyhle MR
Carlisle M
Sorensen JR
Hafen PS
Jesperson K
Ahmadi M
Hancock CR
Hyldahl RD
Source :
Medicine and science in sports and exercise [Med Sci Sports Exerc] 2020 Jun; Vol. 52 (6), pp. 1280-1293.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this investigation was to characterize skeletal muscle T-cell accumulation after contraction-induced muscle damage and test the hypothesis that T cells contribute to postdamage muscle protection (i.e., the repeated bout effect) in a way reminiscent of their role in adaptive immunity.<br />Methods: In vivo lengthening contractions were used to model the repeated bout effect and contralateral repeated bout effect in rats. Intramuscular T-cell subsets were characterized by flow cytometry after single and repeated bouts of lengthening contractions, and an adoptive T-cell transfer experiment was done to test whether T cells from muscle damage-experienced rats can confer protection from injury to damage-naive rats.<br />Results: Electrically stimulated lengthening contractions elicited the repeated bout effect, but not the contralateral repeated bout effect. Although leukocytes (CD45+) were scarce in undamaged muscle (2.1% of all cells), substantially more (63% of all cells) were observed after a single bout of lengthening contractions. Within the leukocyte population were several subsets of T cells, including conventional CD4+, CD8+, memory, and regulatory T cells. In contrast, a minimal increase in T cells was observed after a second bout of lengthening contractions. Conventional CD4+ T cells (FoxP3-) were the most abundant subset in muscle after lengthening contractions. Adoptive T-cell transfer from damage-experienced rats did not confer protection to damage-naive recipient rats.<br />Conclusions: The robust T-cell accumulation, particularly the CD4 subset, after contraction-induced damage suggests a role for these cells in muscle repair and adaptation to muscle damaging contractions. Moreover, T cells are unlikely to mediate the protective adaptations of the repeated bout effect in a manner similar to their role in adaptive immunity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1530-0315
Volume :
52
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Medicine and science in sports and exercise
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31876672
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1249/MSS.0000000000002256