Myostatin upregulation in patients in the chronic phase of severe burn injury leads to muscle cell catabolism

Abstract

Background:\bf Background: Burn injury leads to a hypercatabolic response and ultimately muscle wasting with drastic implications for recovery of bodily functions, patient’s quality of life (QoL), and long-term survival. Several treatment options target the body’s initial stress response, but pharmacological approaches to specifically address muscle protein metabolism have only been poorly investigated. Objective:\bf Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the role of myostatin and follistatin in burn injury and its possible implications in muscle wasting syndrome. Methods:\bf Methods: We harvested serum from male patients within 48 h and again 9–12 months after severe burn injury (>20% of total body surface area). By means of myoblast cultures, immunohistochemistry, immunoblotting, and scratch assay, the role of myostatin and its implications in post-burn muscle metabolism and myoblast proliferation and differentiation was analyzed. Results:\bf Results: We were able to show increased proliferative and myogenic capacity, decreased myostatin, decreased SMAD 2/3, and elevated follistatin concentrations in human skeletal myoblast cultures with serum conditioned medium of patients in the acute phase of burn injury and conversely a reversed situation in patients in the chronic phase of burn injury. Thus, there is a biphasic response to burn trauma, initiated by an anabolic state and followed by long-term hypercatabolism. Conclusion:\bf Conclusion: We conclude that the myostatin signaling pathway plays an important regulative role in burn-associated muscle wasting and that blockade of myostatin could prove to be a valuable treatment approach improving the rehabilitation process, QoL, and long-term survival after severe burn injury

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