Identification and Imaging of Skeletal Muscle Response to Graded Nerve Crush

NIH RePORTER · NIH · K08 · $156,593 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary Atrophy and fibrosis of skeletal muscle after neuromuscular trauma is a significant impediment to the restoration of function after severe neuromuscular trauma. Despite this, dynamic assessment tools for muscle wasting and dysfunction are limited, leaving a critical gap in the orthopedic surgeon’s ability to assess the degree of neurogenic muscle injury and its ultimate prognosis. This gap stems in part from an incomplete understanding of the role of increased expression of transcriptional factors and proteases related to atrophy, and inability to dynamically assess them clinically. Calpain is one of these proteases central to the myofibril destruction of neurogenic atrophy, and therefore has potential to serve as a marker of muscle atrophy. However, translation of this relationship into a diagnostic tool is limited by a lack of techniques for real time assessment of calpain activity. The proposed work seeks to explore the potential for use of optical probes to identify muscle atrophy by examining the relationship between nerve injury and muscle contractility and calpain activity. Aim 1a will determine if calpain expression and activity will increase proportionally with nerve injury and muscle dysfunction. Equal numbers of male and female mice will be subjected to a varying degree of unilateral sciatic nerve crush injury. At a subsequent surgery, at staged intervals, functional recovery will be assessed with walking track analysis and grip strength testing. Hindlimb muscles will undergo ex-vivo contractility testing, as well as histomorphometric analysis and relevant transcriptional factors will be assayed. Calpain activity will be quantified with ELISA kits and with use of a pre-clinical imaging system to detect near-infrared fluorescence (NIR) within the hindlimb muscles after administration of an injectable calpain sensitive probe. In Aim 1b, a unilateral sciatic nerve transection and repair will be performed in the mice, and the same series of functional tests, transcriptional assays and NIR imaging with the optical probe will be undertaken. Similarly, Aim 1c will utilize the same methodologic assessments, at the same time intervals, after removal of a segment of sciatic nerve. The increasing degree of nerve injuries and proposed assessments will help to delineate the canonical pathways of muscle atrophy after nerve injury, and the proposed optical probe will provide a powerful new diagnostic tool. As an orthopedic surgeon with a practice devoted to the care of mangled limbs, I understand the clinical impact of such injuries, but need protected time and resources to develop the skills to study these at a molecular level. In addition to the investigations described above, I will participate in graduate coursework to improve my understanding of molecular biology, as well as optical and biological imaging. I will regularly participate in scholarly activities such as journal clubs and grant seminars through the Musculoskeletal R...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10878833
Project number
5K08AR080260-03
Recipient
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
David Micah Brogan
Activity code
K08
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$156,593
Award type
5
Project period
2022-07-01 → 2026-06-30