Litcius/Paper detail

Skeletal muscle immobilisation-induced atrophy: mechanistic insights from human studies

Colleen S. Deane, Mathew Piasecki, Philip J. Atherton

2024Clinical Science41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Periods of skeletal muscle disuse lead to rapid declines in muscle mass (atrophy), which is fundamentally underpinned by an imbalance between muscle protein synthesis (MPS) and muscle protein breakdown (MPB). The complex interplay of molecular mechanisms contributing to the altered regulation of muscle protein balance during disuse have been investigated but rarely synthesised in the context of humans. This narrative review discusses human models of muscle disuse and the ensuing inversely exponential rate of muscle atrophy. The molecular processes contributing to altered protein balance are explored, with a particular focus on growth and breakdown signalling pathways, mitochondrial adaptations and neuromuscular dysfunction. Finally, key research gaps within the disuse atrophy literature are highlighted providing future avenues to enhance our mechanistic understanding of human disuse atrophy.

Topics & Concepts

Muscle atrophyAtrophySkeletal muscleContext (archaeology)BiologyNarrative reviewNeuroscienceCell biologyAnatomyMedicineGeneticsIntensive care medicinePaleontologyMuscle Physiology and DisordersMuscle metabolism and nutritionNutrition and Health in Aging