distinct structural and functional angiogenic responses are induced by different mechanical stimuli

  • Roger W. P. Kissane
  • , Peter G. Tickle
  • , Natalie E. Doody
  • , Abdullah A. Al-Shammari
  • , Stuart Egginton

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveAdequacy of the microcirculation is essential for maintaining repetitive skeletal muscle function while avoiding fatigue. It is unclear, however, whether capillary remodelling after different angiogenic stimuli is comparable in terms of vessel distribution and consequent functional adaptations. We determined the physiological consequences of two distinct mechanotransductive stimuli: (1) overload‐mediated abluminal stretch (OV); (2) vasodilator‐induced shear stress (prazosin, PR).MethodsIn situ EDL fatigue resistance was determined after 7 or 14 days of intervention, in addition to measurements of femoral artery flow. Microvascular composition (muscle histology) and oxidative capacity (citrate synthase activity) were quantified, and muscle PO2 calculated using advanced mathematical modelling.ResultsCompared to controls, capillary‐to‐fiber ratio was higher after OV14 (134%, p < .001) and PR14 (121%, p < .05), although fatigue resistance only improved after overload (7 days: 135%, 14 days: 125%, p < .05). In addition, muscle overload improved local capillary supply indices and reduced CS activity, while prazosin treatment failed to alter either index of aerobic capacity.ConclusionTargeted capillary growth in response to abluminal stretch is a potent driver of improved muscle fatigue resistance, while shear stress‐driven angiogenesis has no beneficial effect on muscle function. In terms of capillarity, more is not necessarily better.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalMICROCIRCULATION
Volume28
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2021
Externally publishedYes

Funding Agency

  • Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences

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