Inducible deletion of endothelial cell Efnb2 delays capillary regeneration and attenuates myofibre reinnervation following myotoxin injury in mice

Author:

Morton Aaron B.12ORCID,Jacobsen Nicole L.2ORCID,Diller Alexandra R.3ORCID,Kendra Jacob A.1ORCID,Golpasandi Shadi1,Cornelison D D W34,Segal Steven S.25678ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Kinesiology and Sport Management Texas A&M University College Station TX USA

2. Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology University of Missouri Columbia MO USA

3. Division of Biological Sciences University of Missouri Columbia MO USA

4. Christopher S. Bond Life Sciences Center University of Missouri Columbia MO USA

5. Dalton Cardiovascular Research Center Columbia MO USA

6. Department of Biomedical Sciences University of Missouri Columbia MO USA

7. Department of Biomedical, Biological, and Chemical Engineering University of Missouri Columbia MO USA

8. Department of Nutrition and Exercise Physiology University of Missouri Columbia MO USA

Abstract

AbstractAcute injury of skeletal muscle disrupts myofibres, microvessels and motor innervation. Myofibre regeneration is well characterized, however its relationship with the regeneration of microvessels and motor nerves is undefined. Endothelial cell (EC) ephrin‐B2 (Efnb2) is required for angiogenesis during embryonic development and promotes neurovascular regeneration in the adult. We hypothesized that, following acute injury to skeletal muscle, loss of EC Efnb2 would impair microvascular regeneration and the recovery of neuromuscular junction (NMJ) integrity. Mice (aged 3–6 months) were bred for EC‐specific conditional knockout (CKO) of Efnb2 following tamoxifen injection with non‐injected CKO mice as controls (CON). The gluteus maximus, tibialis anterior or extensor digitorum longus muscle was then injured with local injection of BaCl2. Intravascular staining with wheat germ agglutinin revealed diminished capillary area in the gluteus maximus of CKO vs. CON at 5 days post‐injury (dpi); both recovered to uninjured (0 dpi) level by 10 dpi. At 0 dpi, tibialis anterior isometric force of CKO was less than CON. At 10 dpi, isometric force was reduced by half in both groups. During intermittent contractions (75 Hz, 330 ms s–1, 120 s), isometric force fell during indirect (sciatic nerve) stimulation whereas force was maintained during direct (electrical field) stimulation of myofibres. Neuromuscular transmission failure correlated with perturbed presynaptic (terminal Schwann cells) and postsynaptic (nicotinic acetylcholine receptors) NMJ morphology in CKO. Resident satellite cell number on extensor digitorum longus myofibres did not differ between groups. Following acute injury of skeletal muscle, loss of Efnb2 in ECs delays capillary regeneration and attenuates recovery of NMJ structure and function. imageKey points The relationship between microvascular regeneration and motor nerve regeneration following skeletal muscle injury is undefined. Expression of Efnb2 in endothelial cells (ECs) is essential to vascular development and promotes neurovascular regeneration in the adult. To test the hypothesis that EfnB2 in ECs is required for microvascular regeneration and myofibre reinnervation, we induced conditional knockout of Efnb2 in ECs of mice. Acute injury was then induced by BaCl2 injection into gluteus maximus, tibialis anterior or extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle. Capillary regeneration was reduced at 5 days post‐injury (dpi) in gluteus maximus of conditional knockout vs. controls; at 10 dpi, neither differed from uninjured. Nerve stimulation revealed neuromuscular transmission failure in tibialis anterior with perturbed neuromuscular junction structure. Resident satellite cell number on EDL myofibres did not differ between groups. Conditional knockout of EC Efnb2 delays capillary regeneration and attenuates recovery of neuromuscular junction structure and function.

Publisher

Wiley

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