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Dive into the research topics where Scott Medler is active.

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Featured researches published by Scott Medler.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2003

Analysis of myofibrillar proteins and transcripts in adult skeletal muscles of the American lobster Homarus americanus: variable expression of myosins, actin and troponins in fast, slow-twitch and slow-tonic fibres

Scott Medler; Donald L. Mykles

SUMMARY Skeletal muscles are diverse in their contractile properties, with many of these differences being directly related to the assemblages of myofibrillar isoforms characteristic of different fibers. Crustacean muscles are similar to other muscles in this respect, although the majority of information about differences in muscle organization comes from vertebrate species. In the present study, we examined the correlation between myofibrillar protein isoforms and the patterns of myofibrillar gene expression in fast, slow-phasic (S1) and slow-tonic (S2) fibers of the American lobster Homarus americanus. SDS-PAGE and western blotting were used to identify isoform assemblages of myosin heavy chain (MHC), P75, troponin T (TnT) and troponin I (TnI). RT-PCR was used to monitor expression of fast and slow (S1) MHC, P75 and actin in different fiber types, and the MHC and actin levels were quantified by real-time PCR. Fast and slow fibers from the claw closers predominantly expressed fast and S1 MHC, respectively, but also lower levels of the alternate MHC. By contrast, fast fibers from the deep abdominal muscle expressed fast MHC exclusively. In addition, slow muscles expressed significantly higher levels of actin than fast fibers. A distal bundle of fibers in the cutter claw closer muscle was found to be composed of a mixture of S1 and S2 fibers, many of which possessed a mixture of S1 and S2 MHC isoforms. This pattern supports the idea that S1 and S2 fibers represent extremes in a continuum of slow muscle phenotype. Overall, these patterns demonstrate that crustacean skeletal muscles cannot be strictly categorized into discrete fiber types, but a muscles properties probably represent a point on a continuum of fiber types. This trend may result from differences in innervation pattern, as each muscle is controlled by a unique combination of phasic, tonic or both phasic and tonic motor nerves. In this respect, future studies examining how muscle phenotype correlates with innervation pattern may help account for variation in crustacean fiber types.


Physiological Reports | 2014

Diet‐induced obesity alters skeletal muscle fiber types of male but not female mice

Maxwell S. DeNies; Jordan Johnson; Amanda B. Maliphol; Michael Bruno; Annabelle Kim; Abbas Rizvi; Kevyn Rustici; Scott Medler

Skeletal muscles are highly plastic tissues capable dramatic remodeling in response to use, disuse, disease, and other factors. Growing evidence suggests that adipose tissues exert significant effects on the basic fiber‐type composition of skeletal muscles. In the current study, we investigated the long‐term effects of a high‐fat diet and subsequent obesity on the muscle fiber types in C57 BLK/6J mice. Litters of mice were randomly assigned to either a high‐fat diet or a control group at the time of weaning, and were maintained on this diet for approximately 1 year. Single fibers were harvested from the soleus and plantaris muscles, and fiber types were determined using SDS‐PAGE. The high‐fat diet mice were significantly heavier than the control mice (39.17 ± 2.7 g vs. 56.87 ± 3.4 g; P < 0.0003), but muscle masses were not different. In male mice, the high‐fat diet was associated with a significantly lower proportion of slow, type I fibers in the soleus muscle (40.4 ± 3.5% vs. 29.33 ± 2.6%; P < 0.0165). Moreover, the proportion of type I fibers in the soleus of male mice was inversely proportional to the relative fatness of the male mice (P < 0.003; r2 = 0.65), but no association was observed in female mice. In male mice, the decline in type I fibers was correlated with an increase in type I/IIA hybrid fibers, suggesting that the type I fibers were transformed primarily into these hybrids. The reported trends indicate that type I fibers are most susceptible to the effects of obesity, and that these fiber‐type changes can be sex specific.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2009

Skeletal muscle fiber types in the ghost crab, Ocypode quadrata: implications for running performance.

Michael J. Perry; Jennifer Tait; John C. Hu; Scott C. White; Scott Medler

SUMMARY Ghost crabs possess rapid running capabilities, which make them good candidates for comparing invertebrate exercise physiology with that of more extensively studied vertebrates. While a number of studies have examined various aspects of running physiology and biomechanics in terrestrial crabs, none to date have defined the basic skeletal muscle fiber types that power locomotion. In the current study, we investigated skeletal muscle fiber types comprising the extensor and flexor carpopodite muscles in relation to running performance in the ghost crab. We used kinematic analyses to determine stride frequency and muscle shortening velocity and found that both parameters are similar to those of comparably sized mammals but slower than those observed in running lizards. Using several complementary methods, we found that the muscles are divided into two primary fiber types: those of the proximal and distal regions possess long sarcomeres (6.2±2.3 μm) observed in crustacean slow fibers and have characteristics of aerobic fibers whereas those of the muscle mid-region have short sarcomeres (3.5±0.4 μm) characteristic of fast fibers and appear to be glycolytic. Each fiber type is characterized by several different myofibrillar protein isoforms including multiple isoforms of myosin heavy chain (MHC), troponin I (TnI), troponin T (TnT) and a crustacean fast muscle protein, P75. Three different isoforms of MHC are differentially expressed in the muscles, with fibers of the mid-region always co-expressing two isoforms at a 1:1 ratio within single fibers. Based on our analyses, we propose that these muscles are functionally divided into a two-geared system, with the aerobic fibers used for slow sustained activities and the glycolytic mid-region fibers being reserved for explosive sprints. Finally, we identified subtle differences in myofibrillar isoform expression correlated with crab body size, which changes by several orders of magnitude during an animals lifetime.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2010

Myostatin from the American lobster, Homarus americanus: Cloning and effects of molting on expression in skeletal muscles

Kyle S. MacLea; Joseph A. Covi; Hyun-Woo Kim; Erica Chao; Scott Medler; Ernest S. Chang; Donald L. Mykles

A cDNA encoding a myostatin (Mstn)-like gene from an astacuran crustacean, Homarus americanus, was cloned and characterized. Mstn inhibits skeletal muscle growth in vertebrates and may play a role in crustacean muscle as a suppressor of protein synthesis. Sequence analysis and three-dimensional modeling of the Ha-Mstn protein predicted a high degree of conservation with vertebrate and other invertebrate myostatins. Qualitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) demonstrated ubiquitous expression of transcript in all tissues, including skeletal muscles. Quantitative PCR analysis was used to determine the effects of natural molting and eyestalk ablation (ESA) on Ha-Mstn expression in the cutter claw (CT) and crusher claw (CR) closer muscles and deep abdominal (DA) muscle. In intermolt lobsters, the Ha-Mstn mRNA level in the DA muscle was significantly lower than the mRNA levels in the CT and CR muscles. Spontaneous molting decreased Ha-Mstn mRNA during premolt, with the CR muscle, which is composed of slow-twitch (S₁) fibers, responding preferentially (82% decrease) to the atrophic signal compared to fast fibers in CT (51% decrease) and DA (69% decrease) muscles. However, acute increases in circulating ecdysteroids caused by ESA had no effect on Ha-Mstn mRNA levels in the three muscles. These data indicate that the transcription of Ha-Mstn is differentially regulated during the natural molt cycle and it is an important regulator of protein turnover in molt-induced claw muscle atrophy.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2010

The continuum of hybrid IIX/IIB fibers in normal mouse muscles: MHC isoform proportions and spatial distribution within single fibers

Min Yi Zhang; Wei Jie Zhang; Scott Medler

Although skeletal muscle fiber types are often defined as belonging to discrete categories, many muscles possess fibers with intermediate phenotypes. These hybrid fiber types can be identified by their expression of two or more myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms within the same single fiber. In mouse muscles, the most common hybrid fibers are those coexpressing the IIX and IIB MHC isoforms. In the present study, we focused on these IIX/IIB fibers from normal mouse muscles to determine the relative proportions of MHC isoforms at both the protein and mRNA levels and to examine the longitudinal distribution of isoforms within single fibers. We found that IIX/IIB hybrids represent ∼25 and 50% of the fibers in the mouse tibialis anterior and brachioradialis, respectively. The relative proportion of the IIX and IIB isoforms in these fibers spans a continuum, from predominantly IIB-like hybrids to IIX-like hybrids. Quantitative assessment of mRNA levels using real-time PCR from single fibers indicated that IIB expression dominated over IIX expression in most fibers and that a general correlation existed between mRNA isoform levels and MHC protein content. However, the match between mRNA levels and protein content was not precise. Finally, we measured MHC isoform proportions in adjacent fiber segments and discovered that ∼30% of hybrids possessed significant differences in isoform content along their length. In some instances, the muscle fiber type as defined by MHC content changed completely along the length of a fiber. This pattern of asymmetrical MHC isoform content along the length of single fibers suggests that the multiple myonuclei of a muscle fiber may express distinct myofibrillar isoforms in an uncoordinated fashion.


Cells Tissues Organs | 2013

Hybrid Fibers Transform into Distinct Fiber Types in Maturing Mouse Muscles

Hannah Brummer; Min Yi Zhang; Maria Piddoubny; Scott Medler

The role of hybrid fibers as intermediates in fiber type transformations is not completely understood. In some cases hybrids are clearly transitional fibers changing from one type to another, but in others they represent phenotypically stable fibers in normal muscles. In the current study, our goal was to understand the fate of hybrid fibers in fiber type transitions that take place during muscle maturation. Previous studies have reported high proportions of hybrid fibers during postnatal development, but few have followed the fate of these fibers past the time of weaning. We quantified proportions of hybrid fibers in three different mouse skeletal muscles from newly weaned to 6-month-old mice. Hybrid fibers were very prevalent in the brachioradialis (BR) and tibialis anterior (TA) muscles from newly weaned mice, where they constituted 50 and 40% of the fibers, respectively. These hybrids declined steadily to about 15-30% over the next several months. In the soleus muscle the proportion of hybrids did not change, but constituted approximately 20% of fibers. The reduction in IIX/IIB hybrids resulted from different processes in the BR and the TA. In the BR, the reduction was coincident with an increase in type IIX fibers. In the TA, the number of IIX/IIB hybrids was inversely correlated with the proportion of IIB fibers. These patterns reveal that the role of hybrid fibers as intermediates in muscle development is complex. Some hybrid fibers in maturing muscles represent transitional fiber types, while others are phenotypically stable. Moreover, the fate of transitional fibers may be distinct among similar fiber types within different muscles.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2002

Comparative trends in shortening velocity and force production in skeletal muscles

Scott Medler


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2002

Myofibrillar protein isoform expression is correlated with synaptic efficacy in slow fibres of the claw and leg opener muscles of crayfish and lobster

Donald L. Mykles; Scott Medler; Annette Koenders; Robin L. Cooper


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2004

Fiber polymorphism in skeletal muscles of the American lobster, Homarus americanus: continuum between slow-twitch (S1) and slow-tonic (S2) fibers

Scott Medler; Travis R. Lilley; Donald L. Mykles


Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Comparative Experimental Biology | 2004

Two fast-type fibers in claw closer and abdominal deep muscles of the Australian freshwater crustacean, cherax destructor, differ in Ca2+ sensitivity and troponin-I isoforms

Annette Koenders; Tina Marie Lamey; Scott Medler; Jan M. West; Donald L. Mykles

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Abbas Rizvi

State University of New York at Fredonia

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Annabelle Kim

State University of New York at Fredonia

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Jordan Johnson

State University of New York at Fredonia

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Kevyn Rustici

State University of New York at Fredonia

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Maxwell S. DeNies

State University of New York at Fredonia

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Michael Bruno

State University of New York at Fredonia

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