TY - JOUR
T1 - Electroacupuncture suppresses myostatin gene expression
T2 - Cell proliferative reaction in mouse skeletal muscle
AU - Takaoka, Yutaka
AU - Ohta, Mika
AU - Ito, Akihiko
AU - Takamatsu, Kunihiko
AU - Sugano, Aki
AU - Funakoshi, Kotaro
AU - Takaoka, Nobuo
AU - Sato, Nobuko
AU - Yokozaki, Hiroshi
AU - Arizono, Naoki
AU - Goto, Shuji
AU - Maeda, Eiichi
PY - 2007/7/18
Y1 - 2007/7/18
N2 - Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) may provide patients with an alternative to traditional medicine, but an assessment of its efficacy is required. One CAM method, electroacupuncture (EA) treatment, is a maneuver that utilizes stimulation of acupuncture needles with a low-frequency microcurrent. To study the effect of short-term EA, we evaluated the differential expression of genes induced by EA in mouse skeletal muscle for up to 24 h. We then used RT-PCR to confirm the expression patterns of six differentially expressed genes. Bioinformatics analysis of their transcription control regions showed that EA-inducible genes have numerous common binding motifs that are related to cell differentiation, cell proliferation, muscle repair, and hyperplasia. These results suggested that EA treatment may induce cell proliferation in skeletal muscle. To verify this possibility, we used EA to stimulate mouse skeletal muscle daily for up to 1 mo and examined the long-term effects. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that nuclei of muscle cells treated with EA for 1 mo, especially nuclei of satellite cells, reacted with anti-human PCNA. Also, expression of the gene encoding myostatin, which is a growth repressor in muscle satellite cells, was suppressed by daily EA treatment for 1 wk; EA treatment for 1 mo resulted in more marked suppression of the gene. These molecular findings constitute strong evidence that EA treatment suppresses myostatin expression, which leads to a satellite cell-related proliferative reaction and repair in skeletal muscle.
AB - Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) may provide patients with an alternative to traditional medicine, but an assessment of its efficacy is required. One CAM method, electroacupuncture (EA) treatment, is a maneuver that utilizes stimulation of acupuncture needles with a low-frequency microcurrent. To study the effect of short-term EA, we evaluated the differential expression of genes induced by EA in mouse skeletal muscle for up to 24 h. We then used RT-PCR to confirm the expression patterns of six differentially expressed genes. Bioinformatics analysis of their transcription control regions showed that EA-inducible genes have numerous common binding motifs that are related to cell differentiation, cell proliferation, muscle repair, and hyperplasia. These results suggested that EA treatment may induce cell proliferation in skeletal muscle. To verify this possibility, we used EA to stimulate mouse skeletal muscle daily for up to 1 mo and examined the long-term effects. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that nuclei of muscle cells treated with EA for 1 mo, especially nuclei of satellite cells, reacted with anti-human PCNA. Also, expression of the gene encoding myostatin, which is a growth repressor in muscle satellite cells, was suppressed by daily EA treatment for 1 wk; EA treatment for 1 mo resulted in more marked suppression of the gene. These molecular findings constitute strong evidence that EA treatment suppresses myostatin expression, which leads to a satellite cell-related proliferative reaction and repair in skeletal muscle.
KW - Acupuncture
KW - Electrical current
KW - Muscle repair
KW - Regeneration
KW - Satellite cell
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34547435663&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1152/physiolgenomics.00057.2006
DO - 10.1152/physiolgenomics.00057.2006
M3 - 学術論文
C2 - 17341691
AN - SCOPUS:34547435663
SN - 1094-8341
VL - 30
SP - 102
EP - 110
JO - Physiological Genomics
JF - Physiological Genomics
IS - 2
ER -