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Food, fibre and pharmaceuticals from animals
PERSPECTIVES ON ANIMAL BIOSCIENCES (Open Access)

Overcoming nature’s paradox in skeletal muscle to optimise animal production

Gordon S. Lynch https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9220-9810 A B and René Koopman A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Centre for Muscle Research, Department of Physiology, The University of Melbourne, Vic. 3010, Australia.

B Corresponding author. Email: gsl@unimelb.edu.au

Animal Production Science 59(11) 1957-1969 https://doi.org/10.1071/AN19361
Submitted: 25 June 2019  Accepted: 5 July 2019   Published: 16 September 2019

Journal Compilation © CSIRO 2019 Open Access CC BY-NC-ND

Abstract

Nature’s paradox in skeletal muscle describes the seemingly mutually exclusive relationship between muscle fibre size and oxidative capacity. In mammals, there is a constraint on the size at which mitochondria-rich, high O2-dependent oxidative fibres can attain before they become anoxic or adapt to a glycolytic phenotype, being less reliant on O2. This implies that a muscle fibre can hypertrophy at the expense of its endurance capacity. Adaptations to activity (exercise) generally obey this relationship, with optimal muscle endurance generally being linked to an enhanced proportion of small, slow oxidative fibres and muscle strength (force and/or power) being linked to an enhanced proportion of large, fast glycolytic fibres. This relationship generally constrains not only the physiological limits of performance (e.g. speed and endurance), but also the capacity to manipulate muscle attributes such as fibre size and composition, with important relevance to the livestock and aquaculture industries for producing specific muscle traits such as (flesh) quality, texture and taste. Highly glycolytic (white) muscles have different traits than do highly oxidative (red) muscles and so the ability to manipulate muscle attributes to produce flesh with specific traits has important implications for optimising meat production and quality. Understanding the biological regulation of muscle size, and phenotype and the capacity to manipulate signalling pathways to produce specific attributes, has important implications for promoting ethically sustainable and profitable commercial livestock and aquaculture practices and for developing alternative food sources, including ‘laboratory meat’ or ‘clean meat’. This review describes the exciting potential of manipulating muscle attributes relevant to animal production, through traditional nutritional and pharmacological approaches and through viral-mediated strategies that could theoretically push the limits of muscle fibre growth, adaptation and plasticity.

Additional keywords: muscle fibre, muscle fiber, muscle growth, muscle plasticity, oxidative, glycolytic.


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