This investigation tested the hypothesis that differences in the growth of fore- and hindlimb muscles in the rat are regulated by the pituitary and food intake. Using morphometric techniques, the growth of muscle fibers was compared in two slow-twitch muscles, the flexor carpi ulnaris (FCU) of the forelimb, and the soleus of the hindlimb, in male Wistar rats fed ad libitum, food restricted (FR) or hypophysectomized (hypox) from age 60 days. Growth was defined as an increase in fiber diameter and/or type 1 fiber percentage. The soleus had larger diameter fibers than the FCU in controls and FR, but not hypox rats. The growth in diameter, between 60 and 180 days, of both types 1 and 2 fibers in the soleus and type 2 fibers in the FCU was inhibited by hypox and, to a lesser extent, FR. Neither type 1 fiber diameter nor percentage of type 1 fibers in the FCU increased with age nor was it affected by hypox or FR. The percentage of type 1 fibers was higher in the soleus than the FCU and was further increased in the soleus of hypox rats. Food restriction produced a smaller rise than hypox in type 1 fiber percentage in the soleus. Thus, differences in fore- and hindlimb muscle fiber growth are modulated by pituitary hormones and, to a lesser extent, by food intake.
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