Abstract
Heat shock treatments have been used to appreciably increase heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) content and the phosphorylation of heat shock protein 27 (Hsp27p). The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether diathermy can increase Hsp70 and Hsp27p content in skeletal muscle. Fourteen subjects (7 males and 7 females, 18–35 years) received a muscle biopsy from the v. lateralis and then underwent 20 min of diathermy followed by 20 min of hot pack heating on the contralateral leg. Twenty-four hours following treatment, a second muscle biopsy was performed on the treated leg. All samples were analyzed for Hsp70 and Hsp27p content using western immunoblotting. Images of the blots were obtained and analyzed via densitometry. A paired t-test was used to examine differences in heat shock protein content between the treated and untreated legs. Twenty-four hours following the heat treatment, female subjects significantly (P < 0.05) increased Hsp70 (+58%) and Hsp27p (+100%) content compared to the untreated leg. Male subjects had non-significant increases in Hsp70 (+35%) and Hsp27p (+32%) skeletal muscle content. These results implicate that diathermy can be an effective means to induce Hsp70 and Hsp27p in human skeletal muscle.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution.



References
Beere HM (2004) “The stress of dying”: the role of heat shock proteins in the regulation of apoptosis. J Cell Sci 117(Pt 13):2641–2651
Beere HM (2005) Death versus survival: functional interaction between the apoptotic and stress-inducible heat shock protein pathways. J Clin Invest 115(10):2633–2639
Bergstrom J (1962) Muscle electrolytes in man. Scand J Clin Lab Invest 14:511–513
Brock Symons T, Clasey JL, Gater DR, Yates JW (2004) Effects of deep heat as a preventative mechanism on delayed onset muscle soreness. J Strength Cond Res 18(1):155–161
Desplanches D, Ecochard L, Sempore B, Mayet-Sornay MH, Favier R (2004) Skeletal muscle HSP72 response to mechanical unloading: influence of endurance training. Acta Physiol Scand 180(4):387–394
Draper DO, Harris ST, Schulthies S, Durrant E, Knight KL, Ricard M (1998) Hot-pack and 1-MHz ultrasound treatments have an additive effect on muscle temperature increase. J Athl Train 33(1):21–24
Draper DO, Knight K, Fujiwara T, Castel JC (1999) Temperature change in human muscle during and after pulsed short-wave diathermy. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther 29(1):13–18 (discussion 19–22)
Escobedo J, Pucci AM, Koh TJ (2004) HSP25 protects skeletal muscle cells against oxidative stress. Free Radic Biol Med 37(9):1455–1462
Evans RK, Knight KL, Draper DO, Parcell AC (2002) Effects of warm-up before eccentric exercise on indirect markers of muscle damage. Med Sci Sports Exerc 34(12):1892–1899
Gallagher P, Richmond S, Touchberry C, Le T, Vardiman P, Carr D (2006) Effects of diathermy on Hsp70 content in human skeletal muscle. Med Sci Sports Exerc 38(11), Suppl 1:S11
Garrett CL, Draper DO, Knight KL (2000) Heat distribution in the lower leg from pulsed short-wave diathermy and ultrasound treatments. J Athl Train 35(1):50–55
Guay J, Lambert H, Gingras-Breton G, Lavoie JN, Huot J, Landry J (1997) Regulation of actin filament dynamics by p38 map kinase-mediated phosphorylation of heat shock protein 27. J Cell Sci 110(Pt 3):357–368
Huey KA, Thresher JS, Brophy CM, Roy RR (2004) Inactivity-induced modulation of Hsp20 and Hsp25 content in rat hindlimb muscles. Muscle Nerve 30(1):95–101
Huey KA, Hyatt JP, Zhong H, Roy RR (2005) Effects of innervation state on Hsp25 content and phosphorylation in inactive rat plantaris muscles. Acta Physiol Scand 185(3):219–227
Kilgore JL, Musch TI, Ross CR (1998) Physical activity, muscle, and the HSP70 response. Can J Appl Physiol 23(3):245–260
Koh TJ, Escobedo J (2004) Cytoskeletal disruption and small heat shock protein translocation immediately after lengthening contractions. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 286(3):C713–C722
Kojima A, Goto K, Morioka S, Naito T, Akema T, Fujiya H et al (2007) Heat stress facilitates the regeneration of injured skeletal muscle in rats. J Orthop Sci 12(1):74–82
Kregel KC (2002) Heat shock proteins: modifying factors in physiological stress responses and acquired thermotolerance. J Appl Physiol 92(5):2177–2186
Ku Z, Yang J, Menon V, Thomason DB (1995) Decreased polysomal HSP-70 may slow polypeptide elongation during skeletal muscle atrophy. Am J Physiol 268(6 Pt 1):C1369–C1374
Laemmli UK (1970) Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of the head of bacteriophage T4. Nature 227(5259):680–685
Lavoie JN, Lambert H, Hickey E, Weber LA, Landry J (1995) Modulation of cellular thermoresistance and actin filament stability accompanies phosphorylation-induced changes in the oligomeric structure of heat shock protein 27. Mol Cell Biol 15(1):505–516
Lawler JM, Song W, Kwak HB (2006) Differential response of heat shock proteins to hindlimb unloading and reloading in the soleus. Muscle Nerve 33(2):200–207
Maglara AA, Vasilaki A, Jackson MJ, McArdle A (2003) Damage to developing mouse skeletal muscle myotubes in culture: protective effect of heat shock proteins. J Physiol 548(Pt 3):837–846
McArdle A, Dillmann WH, Mestril R, Faulkner JA, Jackson MJ (2004) Overexpression of HSP70 in mouse skeletal muscle protects against muscle damage and age-related muscle dysfunction. FASEB J 18(2):355–357
Miyabara EH, Martin JL, Griffin TM, Moriscot AS, Mestril R (2006) Overexpression of inducible 70-kDa heat shock protein in mouse attenuates skeletal muscle damage induced by cryolesioning. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 290(4):C1128–C1138
Naito H, Powers SK, Demirel HA, Sugiura T, Dodd SL, Aoki J (2000) Heat stress attenuates skeletal muscle atrophy in hindlimb-unweighted rats. J Appl Physiol 88(1):359–363
Nosaka K, Sakamoto K, Newton M, Sacco P (2004) Influence of pre-exercise muscle temperature on responses to eccentric exercise. J Athl Train 39(2):132–137
Nosaka K, Muthalib M, Lavender A, Laursen PB (2007) Attenuation of muscle damage by preconditioning with muscle hyperthermia 1-day prior to eccentric exercise. Eur J Appl Physiol 99(2):185–192
Ogura Y, Naito H, Tsurukawa T, Ichinoseki-Sekine N, Saga N, Sugiura T et al (2007) Microwave hyperthermia treatment increases heat shock proteins in human skeletal muscle. Br J Sports Med 41(7):453–455
Oishi Y, Taniguchi K, Matsumoto H, Ishihara A, Ohira Y, Roy RR (2002) Muscle type-specific response of HSP60, HSP72, and HSC73 during recovery after elevation of muscle temperature. J Appl Physiol 92(3):1097–1103
Oishi Y, Taniguchi K, Matsumoto H, Ishihara A, Ohira Y, Roy RR (2003a) Differential responses of HSPs to heat stress in slow and fast regions of rat gastrocnemius muscle. Muscle Nerve 28(5):587–594
Oishi Y, Taniguchi K, Matsumoto H, Kawano F, Ishihara A, Ohira Y (2003b) Upregulation of HSP72 in reloading rat soleus muscle after prolonged hindlimb unloading. Jpn J Physiol 53(4):281–286
Robertson VJ, Ward AR, Jung P (2005) The effect of heat on tissue extensibility: a comparison of deep and superficial heating. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 86(4):819–825
Selsby JT, Dodd SL (2005) Heat treatment reduces oxidative stress and protects muscle mass during immobilization. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 289(1):R134–R139
Selsby JT, Rother S, Tsuda S, Pracash O, Quindry JC, Dodd SL (2007) Intermittent hyperthermia enhances skeletal muscle regrowth and attenuates oxidative damage following reloading. J Appl Physiol 102(4):1702–1707
Shinohara T, Takahashi N, Ooie T, Ichinose M, Hara M, Yonemochi H et al (2004) Estrogen inhibits hyperthermia-induced expression of heat-shock protein 72 and cardioprotection against ischemia/reperfusion injury in female rat heart. J Mol Cell Cardiol 37(5):1053–1061
Smolka MB, Zoppi CC, Alves AA, Silveira LR, Marangoni S, Pereira-Da-Silva L et al (2000) HSP72 as a complementary protection against oxidative stress induced by exercise in the soleus muscle of rats. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 279(5):R1539–R1545
Uehara K, Goto K, Kobayashi T, Kojima A, Akema T, Sugiura T et al (2004) Heat-stress enhances proliferative potential in rat soleus muscle. Jpn J Physiol 54(3):263–271
Voss MR, Stallone JN, Li M, Cornelussen RN, Knuefermann P, Knowlton AA (2003) Gender differences in the expression of heat shock proteins: the effect of estrogen. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 285(2):H687–H692
Welch WJ (1992) Mammalian stress response: cell physiology, structure/function of stress proteins, and implications for medicine and disease. Physiol Rev 72(4):1063–1081
Acknowledgments
Research supported, in part, by a University of Kansas General Research Fund grant (P. Gallagher), and a McNair Scholarship (T. Le).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Touchberry, C., Le, T., Richmond, S. et al. Diathermy treatment increases heat shock protein expression in female, but not male skeletal muscle. Eur J Appl Physiol 102, 319–323 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-007-0572-y
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-007-0572-y
Keywords
- Diathermy
- Muscle heating
- Heat shock
- Hsp70
- Hsp27