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Dive into the research topics where Jo C. Bruusgaard is active.

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Featured researches published by Jo C. Bruusgaard.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Myonuclei acquired by overload exercise precede hypertrophy and are not lost on detraining

Jo C. Bruusgaard; Ida Beitnes Johansen; Ingrid M. Egner; Zaheer A. Rana; Kristian Gundersen

Effects of previous strength training can be long-lived, even after prolonged subsequent inactivity, and retraining is facilitated by a previous training episode. Traditionally, such “muscle memory” has been attributed to neural factors in the absence of any identified local memory mechanism in the muscle tissue. We have used in vivo imaging techniques to study live myonuclei belonging to distinct muscle fibers and observe that new myonuclei are added before any major increase in size during overload. The old and newly acquired nuclei are retained during severe atrophy caused by subsequent denervation lasting for a considerable period of the animal’s lifespan. The myonuclei seem to be protected from the high apoptotic activity found in inactive muscle tissue. A hypertrophy episode leading to a lasting elevated number of myonuclei retarded disuse atrophy, and the nuclei could serve as a cell biological substrate for such memory. Because the ability to create myonuclei is impaired in the elderly, individuals may benefit from strength training at an early age, and because anabolic steroids facilitate more myonuclei, nuclear permanency may also have implications for exclusion periods after a doping offense.


The Journal of Physiology | 2003

Number and spatial distribution of nuclei in the muscle fibres of normal mice studied in vivo

Jo C. Bruusgaard; Knut Liestøl; Merete Ekmark; K. Kollstad; Kristian Gundersen

We present here a new technique with which to visualize nuclei in living muscle fibres in the intact animal, involving injection of labelled DNA into single cells. This approach allowed us to determine the position of all of nuclei within a sarcolemma without labelling satellite cells. In contrast to what has been reported in tissue culture, we found that the nuclei were immobile, even when observed over several days. Nucleic density was uniform along the fibre except for the endplate and some myotendinous junctions, where the density was higher. The perijunctional region had the same number of nuclei as the rest of the fibre. In the extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle, the extrajunctional nuclei were elongated and precisely aligned to the long axis of the fibre. In the soleus, the nuclei were rounder and not well aligned. When comparing small and large fibres in the soleus, the number of nuclei varied approximately in proportion to cytoplasmic volume, while in the EDL the number was proportional to surface area. Statistical analysis revealed that the nuclei were not randomly distributed in either the EDL or the soleus. For each fibre, actual distributions were compared with computer simulations in which nuclei were assumed to repel each other, which optimizes the distribution of nuclei with respect to minimizing transport distances. The simulated patterns were regular, with clear row‐like structures when the density of nuclei was low. The non‐random and often row‐like distribution of nuclei observed in muscle fibres may thus reflect regulatory mechanisms whereby nuclei repel each other in order to minimize transport distances.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

In vivo time-lapse microscopy reveals no loss of murine myonuclei during weeks of muscle atrophy.

Jo C. Bruusgaard; Kristian Gundersen

Numerous studies have suggested that muscle atrophy is accompanied by apoptotic loss of myonuclei and therefore recovery would require replenishment by muscle stem cells. We used in vivo time-lapse microscopy to observe the loss and replenishment of myonuclei in murine muscle fibers following induced muscle atrophy. To our surprise, imaging of single fibers for up to 28 days did not support the concept of nuclear loss during atrophy. Muscles were inactivated by denervation, nerve impulse block, or mechanical unloading. Nuclei were stained in vivo either acutely by intracellular injection of fluorescent oligonucleotides or in time-lapse studies after transfection with a plasmid encoding GFP with a nuclear localization signal. We observed no loss of myonuclei in fast- or slow-twitch muscle fibers despite a greater than 50% reduction in fiber cross-sectional area. TUNEL labeling of fragmented DNA on histological sections revealed high levels of apoptotic nuclei in inactive muscles. However, when costained for laminin and dystrophin, virtually none of the TUNEL-positive nuclei could be classified as myonuclei; apoptosis was confined to stromal and satellite cells. We conclude that disuse atrophy is not a degenerative process, but is rather a change in the balance between protein synthesis and proteolysis in a permanent cell syncytium.


The Journal of Physiology | 2008

Nuclear domains during muscle atrophy: nuclei lost or paradigm lost?

Kristian Gundersen; Jo C. Bruusgaard

According to the current paradigm, muscle nuclei serve a certain cytoplasmic domain. To preserve the domain size, it is believed that nuclei are injected from satellite cells fusing to fibres undergoing hypertrophy, and lost by apoptosis during atrophy. Based on single fibre observations in and ex vivo we suggest that nuclear domains are not as constant as is often indicated. Moreover, recent time lapse in vivo imaging of single fibres suggests that at least for the first few weeks, atrophy is not accompanied by any loss of nuclei. Apoptosis is abundant in muscle tissue during atrophy conditions, but in our opinion it has not been unequivocally demonstrated that such nuclei are myonuclei. As we see it, the preponderance of current evidence suggests that disuse atrophy is not accompanied by loss of nuclei, at least not for the first 2 months. Moreover, it has not been proven that myonuclear apoptosis does occur in permanent fibres undergoing atrophy; it seems more likely that it is confined to stromal cells and satellite cells. If muscle atrophy is not related to loss of nuclei, design of intervention therapies should focus on protein metabolism rather than regeneration from stem cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Regulation of gephyrin assembly and glycine receptor synaptic stability.

Cécile Bedet; Jo C. Bruusgaard; Sandra Vergo; Line Groth-Pedersen; Stefan Eimer; Antoine Triller; Christian Vannier

Gephyrin is required for the formation of clusters of the glycine receptor (GlyR) in the neuronal postsynaptic membrane. It can make trimers and dimers through its N- and C-terminal G and E domains, respectively. Gephyrin oligomerization could thus create a submembrane lattice providing GlyR-binding sites. We investigated the relationships between the stability of cell surface GlyR and the ability of gephyrin splice variants to form oligomers. Using truncated and full-length gephyrins we found that the 13-amino acid sequence (cassette 5) prevents G domain trimerization. Moreover, E domain dimerization is inhibited by the gephyrin central L domain. All of the gephyrin variants bind GlyR β subunit cytoplasmic loop with high affinity regardless of their cassette composition. Coexpression experiments in COS-7 cells demonstrated that GlyR bound to gephyrin harboring cassette 5 cannot be stabilized at the cell surface. This gephyrin variant was found to deplete synapses from both GlyR and gephyrin in transfected neurons. These data suggest that the relative expression level of cellular variants influence the overall oligomerization pattern of gephyrin and thus the turnover of synaptic GlyR.


Development | 2016

Satellite cell depletion prevents fiber hypertrophy in skeletal muscle.

Ingrid M. Egner; Jo C. Bruusgaard; Kristian Gundersen

The largest mammalian cells are the muscle fibers, and they have multiple nuclei to support their large cytoplasmic volumes. During hypertrophic growth, new myonuclei are recruited from satellite stem cells into the fiber syncytia, but it was recently suggested that such recruitment is not obligatory: overload hypertrophy after synergist ablation of the plantaris muscle appeared normal in transgenic mice in which most of the satellite cells were abolished. When we essentially repeated these experiments analyzing the muscles by immunohistochemistry and in vivo and ex vivo imaging, we found that overload hypertrophy was prevented in the satellite cell-deficient mice, in both the plantaris and the extensor digitorum longus muscles. We attribute the previous findings to a reliance on muscle mass as a proxy for fiber hypertrophy, and to the inclusion of a significant number of regenerating fibers in the analysis. We discuss that there is currently no model in which functional, sustainable hypertrophy has been unequivocally demonstrated in the absence of satellite cells; an exception is re-growth, which can occur using previously recruited myonuclei without addition of new myonuclei. Highlighted Article: Satellite cell depletion prevents fiber hypertrophy in the plantaris and extensor digitorum longus muscles in mice, suggesting that satellite cells are obligatory for hypertrophic growth.


The Journal of Physiology | 2011

Hypoxia inducible factor 1α links fast-patterned muscle activity and fast muscle phenotype in rats

Ida G. Lunde; Siobhan L. Anton; Jo C. Bruusgaard; Zaheer A. Rana; Stian Ellefsen; Kristian Gundersen

Non‐technical summary  Muscle fibres change when they are used differently, such as by exercise. Genetic studies have shown that a hyperactive form of the gene regulatory protein hypoxia inducible factor 1α (HIF‐1α) occurs twice as often among strength‐trained athletes as in the normal population. HIF‐1α is ‘sensing’ the oxygen levels in cells, and the oxygen levels change by an order of magnitude in working muscle. We show that an ‘endurance’ type of activity reduces the level of HIF‐1α, while short intense bursts of activity increases it. When HIF‐1α was produced in higher quantities by introducing artificial genes in the muscle fibres they became larger and faster, and with a less oxidative metabolism. Thus, oxygen itself could be a trigger for changes in muscle. The composition of muscle fibres is strongly correlated to major lifestyle conditions such as diabetes and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and HIF‐1α might provide a new molecular link.


eLife | 2016

Enhanced exercise and regenerative capacity in a mouse model that violates size constraints of oxidative muscle fibres.

Saleh Omairi; Antonios Matsakas; Hans Degens; Oliver Kretz; Kenth-Arne Hansson; Andreas Våvang Solbrå; Jo C. Bruusgaard; Barbara Joch; Roberta Sartori; Natasa Giallourou; Robert Mitchell; Henry Collins-Hooper; Keith Foster; Arja Pasternack; Olli Ritvos; Marco Sandri; Vihang A. Narkar; Jonathan R. Swann; Tobias B. Huber; Ketan Patel

A central tenet of skeletal muscle biology is the existence of an inverse relationship between the oxidative fibre capacity and its size. However, robustness of this relationship is unknown. We show that superimposition of Estrogen-related receptor gamma (Errγ) on the myostatin (Mtn) mouse null background (Mtn-/-/ErrγTg/+) results in hypertrophic muscle with a high oxidative capacity thus violating the inverse relationship between fibre size and oxidative capacity. We also examined the canonical view that oxidative muscle phenotype positively correlate with Satellite cell number, the resident stem cells of skeletal muscle. Surprisingly, hypertrophic fibres from Mtn-/-/ErrγTg/+ mouse showed satellite cell deficit which unexpectedly did not affect muscle regeneration. These observations 1) challenge the concept of a constraint between fibre size and oxidative capacity and 2) indicate the important role of the microcirculation in the regenerative capacity of a muscle even when satellite cell numbers are reduced. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.16940.001


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2016

Increased hypertrophic response with increased mechanical load in skeletal muscles receiving identical activity patterns.

Einar Eftestøl; Ingrid M. Egner; Ida G. Lunde; Stian Ellefsen; Tom Andersen; Cecilie Sjåland; Kristian Gundersen; Jo C. Bruusgaard

It is often assumed that mechanical factors are important for effects of exercise on muscle, but during voluntary training and most experimental conditions the effects could solely be attributed to differences in electrical activity, and direct evidence for a mechanosensory pathway has been scarce. We here show that, in rat muscles stimulated in vivo under deep anesthesia with identical electrical activity patterns, isometric contractions induced twofold more hypertrophy than contractions with 50-60% of the isometric force. The number of myonuclei and the RNA levels of myogenin and myogenic regulatory factor 4 were increased with high load, suggesting that activation of satellite cells is mechano dependent. On the other hand, training induced a major shift in fiber type distribution from type 2b to 2x that was load independent, indicating that the electrical signaling rather than mechanosignaling controls fiber type. RAC-α serine/threonine-protein kinase (Akt) and ribosomal protein S6 kinase β-1 (S6K1) were not significantly differentially activated by load, suggesting that the differences in mechanical factors were not important for activating the Akt/mammalian target of rapamycin/S6K1 pathway. The transmembrane molecule syndecan-4 implied in overload hypertrophy in cardiac muscle was not load dependent, suggesting that mechanosignaling in skeletal muscle is different.


Development | 2017

An apparent lack of effect of satellite cell depletion on hypertrophy could be due to methodological limitations. Response to ‘Methodological issues limit interpretation of negative effects of satellite cell depletion on adult muscle hypertrophy’

Ingrid M. Egner; Jo C. Bruusgaard; Kristian Gundersen

In their Correspondence, Charlotte Petersons group suggests that methodological weaknesses of our paper ([Egner et al., 2016][1]) preclude the interpretation that satellite cells (SCs) are obligatory for hypertrophy after mechanical overload (OL), a finding conflicting with their own study

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Ida G. Lunde

Oslo University Hospital

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Stian Ellefsen

Lillehammer University College

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