AI Article Synopsis

  • Adult mice are used in mandibular dynamics studies because their chewing patterns are similar to humans; researchers used botulinum toxin type A (BoNTA) to induce muscle atrophy in one masseter muscle and studied its effects.
  • After BoNTA treatment, there was a significant increase in atrophy-related gene expression and a reduction in muscle size, particularly in the masseter, temporalis, and medial pterygoid muscles, observed at 14 days.
  • The study concluded that impairment of one masticatory muscle affects not only the treated muscle but also its agonistic counterpart, highlighting the interconnectedness of the masticatory system and the need for further clinical research.

Article Abstract

Mice are commonly used to study mandibular dynamics due to their similarity in chewing cycle patterns with humans. Adult mice treated unilaterally with botulinum toxin type A (BoNTA) in the masseter exhibit atrophy of this muscle characterized by an increase in the gene expression of atrophy-related molecular markers, and a reduction in both muscle fiber diameter and muscle mass at 14d. However, the impact of this muscle imbalance on the non-treated masticatory muscles remains unexplored. Here, we hypothesize that the unilateral masseter hypofunction leads to molecular and 3D morphometric signs of atrophy of the masseter and its agonist masticatory muscles in adult mice. Twenty-three 8-week-old male BALB/c mice received a single injection of BoNTA in the right masseter, whereas the left masseter received the same volume of saline solution (control side). Animals were euthanized at 2d, 7d, and 14d, and the masticatory muscles were analyzed for mRNA expression. Five heads were harvested at 14d, fixed, stained with a contrast-enhanced agent, and scanned using X-ray microtomography. The three-dimensional morphometric parameters (the volume and thickness) from muscles in situ were obtained. , and mRNA gene expression were significantly increased at 2 and 7d for both the masseter and temporalis from the BoNTA side. For medial pterygoid, increased mRNA gene expression was found at 7d for and at 2d-7d for . Both the volume and thickness of the masseter, temporalis, and medial pterygoid muscles from the BoNTA side were significantly reduced at 14d. In contrast, the lateral pterygoid from the BoNTA side showed a significant increase in volume at 14d. Therefore, the unilateral hypofunction of the masseter leads to molecular and morphological signs of atrophy in both the BoNTA-injected muscle and its agonistic non-injected masticatory muscles. The generalized effect on the mouse masticatory apparatus when one of its components is intervened suggests the need for more clinical studies to determine the safety of BoNTA usage in clinical dentistry.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10572689PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241914740DOI Listing

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