Advances and challenges in skeletal muscle angiogenesis.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
26608338
Description
The role of capillaries is to serve as the interface for delivery of oxygen and removal of metabolites to/from tissues. During the past decade there has been a proliferation of studies that have advanced our understanding of angiogenesis demonstrating tissue capillary supply is under strict control during health, but poorly controlled in disease - resulting in either excessive capillary growth (pathological angiogenesis) or losses in capillarity (rarefaction). Given that skeletal muscle comprises nearly 40% of body mass in humans, skeletal muscle capillary density has a significant impact on metabolism, endocrine function, and locomotion, and is tightly regulated at many different levels. Skeletal muscle is also high adaptable, and thus one of the few organ systems which can be experimentally manipulated (e.g. by exercise) to study physiologic regulation of angiogenesis. This review will focus on 1) the methodological concerns that have arisen in determining skeletal muscle capillarity, and 2) highlight the concepts that are reshaping our understanding of the angio-adaptation process. We also summarize selected new findings (physical influences, molecular changes and ultrastructural rearrangement of capillaries) that identify areas of future research with the greatest potential to expand our understanding of how angiogenesis is normally regulated, and that may also help to better understand conditions of uncontrolled (pathologic) angiogenesis.
Date of Publication
2015-11-25
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Keyword(s)
exercise
•
human
•
rodent
•
training
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Olfert, I Mark | |
Hellsten, Ylva | |
Egginton, Stuart |
Additional Credits
Series
American journal of physiology - heart and circulatory physiology
Publisher
American Physiological Society
ISSN
0363-6135
Access(Rights)
restricted