Open Access
Open access
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, volume 29, issue 4

Increased Matrix Stiffness Promotes Slow Muscle Fibre Regeneration After Skeletal Muscle Injury

Dongmei Wang 1
Jiahong Wu 2
Zeyu Xu 2
Jinning Jia 3
YIMEI LAI 3
Zhihua He 4
1
 
Department of Physical Education Anhui University of Technology Maanshan Anhui China
2
 
Department of Medicine Sun Yat‐Sen University Shenzhen Guangdong China
3
 
Department of Pathology The First Affiliated Hospital of Gannan Medical University Ganzhou Jiangxi China
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-02-19
scimago Q2
SJR1.207
CiteScore11.5
Impact factor4.3
ISSN15821838, 15824934
Abstract
ABSTRACT

The global prevalence of skeletal muscle diseases has progressively escalated in recent years. This study aimed to explore the potential role of matrix stiffness in the repair mechanisms following skeletal muscle injury. We observed an increase in muscle stiffness, a significant rise in the number of type I muscle fibres and a notable elevation in mRNA expression levels of Myh7/2 alongside a decrease in Myh1/4 on day 3 post tibialis anterior muscle injury. To replicate these in vivo changes, C2C12 cells were cultured under high matrix stiffness conditions, and compared to those on low matrix stiffness, the C2C12 cells cultured on high matrix stiffness showed increased expression levels of Myh7/2 mRNA and production levels of MYH7/2, indicating differentiation into slow‐twitch muscle fibre types. Furthermore, up‐regulation of DRP1 phosphorylation along with elevated F‐actin fluorescence intensity and RHOA and ROCK1 production indicates that high matrix stiffness induces cytoskeletal remodelling to regulate mitochondrial fission processes. Our data also revealed up‐regulation in mRNA expression level for Actb, phosphorylation level for DRP1, mitochondrial quantity and MYH7/2 production level. Importantly, these effects were effectively reversed by the application of ROCK inhibitor Y‐27632, highlighting that targeting cytoskeletal dynamics can modulate myogenic differentiation pathways within C2C12 cells. These findings provide valuable insights into how matrix stiffness influences fibre type transformation during skeletal muscle injury repair while suggesting potential therapeutic targets for intervention.

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