Architectural, functional and molecular responses to concentric and eccentric loading in human skeletal muscle

MV, Franchi and PJ, Atherton and Reeves, Neil D and Flück, M and Williams, J and WK, Mitchell and Selby, A and RM, Beltran Valls and MV, Narici (2014) Architectural, functional and molecular responses to concentric and eccentric loading in human skeletal muscle. Acta Physiologica Scandinavica, 210 (3). pp. 642-654. ISSN 1365-201X

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Abstract

Aim We investigated architectural, functional and molecular responses of human skeletal muscle to concentric (CON) or eccentric (ECC) resistance training (RT). Methods Twelve young males performed 10 weeks of concentric (CON) or eccentric (ECC) resistance training (RT) (n = 6 CON, 6 ECC). An additional 14 males were recruited to evaluate acute muscle fascicle behaviour and molecular signalling in biopsies collected from vastus lateralis (VL) after 30 min of single bouts of CON or ECC exercise. VL volume was measured by magnetic resonance imaging. Muscle architecture (fascicle length, Lf; pennation angle, PA) was evaluated by ultrasonography. Muscle remodelling signals to CON or ECC loading [MAPK/AKT-mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signalling] and inflammatory pathway (TNFαMurf-1-MAFbx) were evaluated by immunoblotting. Results Despite the ~1.2-fold greater load of the ECC group, similar increases in muscle volume (+8% CON and +6% ECC) and in maximal voluntary isometric contraction (+9% CON and +11% ECC) were found after RT. However, increases in Lf were greater after ECC than CON (+12 vs. +5%) while increases in PA were greater in CON than ECC (+30 vs. +5%). Distinct architectural adaptations were associated with preferential growth in the distal regions of VL for ECC (+ECC +8% vs. +CON +2) and mid belly for CON (ECC +7 vs. CON +11%). While MAPK activation (p38MAPK, ERK1/2, p90RSK) was specific to ECC, neither mode affected AKT-mTOR or inflammatory signalling 30 min after exercise. Conclusion Muscle growth with CON and ECC RT occurs with different morphological adaptations reflecting distinct fibre fascicle behaviour and molecular responses.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Acta Physiologica Scandinavica
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/yes_externally_funded
Subjects:
?? yes - externally fundedphysiology ??
ID Code:
226581
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
09 Jan 2025 16:00
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
09 Jan 2025 16:00