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Neuromuscular junctions are stable in patients with cancer cachexia
Ines Boehm, … , Ross A. Jones, Thomas H. Gillingwater
Ines Boehm, … , Ross A. Jones, Thomas H. Gillingwater
Published December 3, 2019
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2020;130(3):1461-1465. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI128411.
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Concise Communication Neuroscience Oncology Article has an altmetric score of 23

Neuromuscular junctions are stable in patients with cancer cachexia

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Abstract

Cancer cachexia is a major cause of patient morbidity and mortality, with no efficacious treatment or management strategy. Despite cachexia sharing pathophysiological features with a number of neuromuscular wasting conditions, including age-related sarcopenia, the mechanisms underlying cachexia remain poorly understood. Studies of related conditions suggest that pathological targeting of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) may play a key role in cachexia, but this has yet to be investigated in human patients. Here, high-resolution morphological analyses were undertaken on NMJs of rectus abdominis obtained from patients undergoing upper GI cancer surgery compared with controls (N = 30; n = 1,165 NMJs). Cancer patients included those with cachexia and weight-stable disease. Despite the low skeletal muscle index and significant muscle fiber atrophy (P < 0.0001) in patients with cachexia, NMJ morphology was fully conserved. No significant differences were observed in any of the pre- and postsynaptic variables measured. We conclude that NMJs remain structurally intact in rectus abdominis in both cancer and cachexia, suggesting that denervation of skeletal muscle is not a major driver of pathogenesis. The absence of NMJ pathology is in stark contrast to what is found in related conditions, such as age-related sarcopenia, and supports the hypothesis that intrinsic changes within skeletal muscle, independent of any changes in motor neurons, represent the primary locus of neuromuscular pathology in cancer cachexia.

Authors

Ines Boehm, Janice Miller, Thomas M. Wishart, Stephen J. Wigmore, Richard J.E. Skipworth, Ross A. Jones, Thomas H. Gillingwater

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Figure 3

Structural integrity of the NMJ in cancer cachexia.

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Structural integrity of the NMJ in cancer cachexia.
Morphometric analysi...
Morphometric analysis using NMJ-morph revealed that NMJ morphology is conserved in both cachexia and weight-stable disease. Data presented as a pair of charts (scatterplot, above; box and whisker plot, below) for key NMJ variables, including measurements of axon diameter (A) and pre- and postsynaptic architecture (B–F). Scatterplots depict the approximately 40 individual NMJs (data points) for the 10 patients (1 to 10) in each group; the mean NMJ value is given by the red line; the observed heterogeneity is a normal feature of human NMJ morphology. Box and whisker plots constructed using the mean patient data in each group (10 patients; control NMJs, n = 387; weight stable NMJs, n = 386; cachexia NMJs, n = 392). Boxes contain the mean (+) and median (line) values for each NMJ variable and enclose the central 25th-75th percentile of the data; whiskers represent the maximum and minimum values. One-way ANOVA paired with Tukey’s post hoc test.

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