Inflammatory processes in muscle injury and repair
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 February 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology
- Vol. 288 (2) , R345-R353
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00454.2004
Abstract
Modified muscle use or injury can produce a stereotypic inflammatory response in which neutrophils rapidly invade, followed by macrophages. This inflammatory response coincides with muscle repair, regeneration, and growth, which involve activation and proliferation of satellite cells, followed by their terminal differentiation. Recent investigations have begun to explore the relationship between inflammatory cell functions and skeletal muscle injury and repair by using genetically modified animal models, antibody depletions of specific inflammatory cell populations, or expression profiling of inflamed muscle after injury. These studies have contributed to a complex picture in which inflammatory cells promote both injury and repair, through the combined actions of free radicals, growth factors, and chemokines. In this review, recent discoveries concerning the interactions between skeletal muscle and inflammatory cells are presented. New findings clearly show a role for neutrophils in promoting muscle damage soon after muscle injury or modified use. No direct evidence is yet available to show that neutrophils play a beneficial role in muscle repair or regeneration. Macrophages have also been shown capable of promoting muscle damage in vivo and in vitro through the release of free radicals, although other findings indicate that they may also play a role in muscle repair and regeneration through growth factors and cytokine-mediated signaling. However, this role for macrophages in muscle regeneration is still not definitive; other cells present in muscle can also produce the potentially regenerative factors, and it remains to be proven whether macrophage-derived factors are essential for muscle repair or regeneration in vivo. New evidence also shows that muscle cells can release positive and negative regulators of inflammatory cell invasion, and thereby play an active role in modulating the inflammatory process. In particular, muscle-derived nitric oxide can inhibit inflammatory cell invasion of healthy muscle and protect muscle from lysis by inflammatory cells in vivo and in vitro. On the other hand, muscle-derived cytokines can signal for inflammatory cell invasion, at least in vitro. The immediate challenge for advancing our current understanding of the relationships between muscle and inflammatory cells during muscle injury and repair is to place what has been learned in vitro into the complex and dynamic in vivo environment.Keywords
This publication has 107 references indexed in Scilit:
- Satellite cells attract monocytes and use macrophages as a support to escape apoptosis and enhance muscle growthThe Journal of cell biology, 2003
- Neutrophils do not contribute to local tissue damage, but play a key role in skeletal muscle regeneration, in mice injected with Bothrops asper snake venomMuscle & Nerve, 2003
- Cytotoxicity of IFN-γ and TNF-α for Vascular Endothelial Cell Is Mediated by Nitric OxideBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2002
- Urokinase-dependent plasminogen activation is required for efficient skeletal muscle regeneration in vivoBlood, 2001
- Radical species in inflammation and overtrainingCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1998
- ED2+ Macrophages Increase Selectively Myoblast Proliferation in Muscle CulturesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1997
- Regulation of Neutrophil Function During ExerciseSports Medicine, 1994
- Cytoprotective function of nitric oxide: Inactivation of superoxide radicals produced by human leukocytesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1991
- Reduction of myocardial infarct size by neutrophil depletion: Effect of duration of occlusionAmerican Heart Journal, 1986
- Age‐related impeded regeneration of mouse minced anterior tibial muscleMuscle & Nerve, 1982