Litcius/Paper detail

Females display relatively preserved muscle quality compared with males during the onset and early stages of C26-induced cancer cachexia

Ana Regina Cabrera, J. William Deaver, Seongkyun Lim, Francielly Morena da Silva, Eleanor R. Schrems, Landen W. Saling, Stavroula Tsitkanou, Megan E. Rosa‐Caldwell, Michael P. Wiggs, Tyrone A. Washington, Nicholas P. Greene

2023Journal of Applied Physiology25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Our study demonstrates biological-sex differences in phenotypic characteristics of cancer cachexia between male and female mice, whereby females display many common characteristics of cachexia (gonadal fat loss and hepatosplenomegaly), protein synthesis markers alterations, and common catabolic markers in skeletal muscle despite relatively preserved muscle mass in early-stage cachexia compared with males. Mechanisms of cancer cachexia appear to differ between sexes. Data suggest need to place onus of early cancer cachexia detection and treatment on nonmuscle tissues in females.

Topics & Concepts

CachexiaSkeletal muscleInternal medicineEndocrinologySarcopeniaBiologyContractilityGastrocnemius muscleWastingCancerMedicineNutrition and Health in AgingMuscle Physiology and DisordersBody Composition Measurement Techniques