This study was conducted based on the hypothesis that the muscle shear modulus measured by ultrasound SWE and titin measured by UTF after EIMD that occurs during eccentric exercises are involved in damage markers similar to those used in previous studies (Kanda et al., 2017; Yamaguchi et al., 2020b; Yamaguchi et al., 2020c). The results revealed that shear modulus showed a significant relationship between muscle strength and titin content, thereby supporting our hypothesis. In this study, dumbbell exercise was used for eccentric exercise. According to a previous study (Damas et al., 2016), the degree of EIMD associated with eccentric exercise strongly appears in the amount of change in MVC. In the exercise task of this study, as described in a previous study (Nosaka and Newton, 2002), participants were tightly secured to the arm-curl bench with nonelastic straps during exercise, and MVC decreased by 48.6% immediately after the exercise task. This change was similar to that reported in previous studies using dumbbell exercise to induce muscle damage (Chen et al., 2007; Lavender and Nosaka, 2006b), and no participants dropped out of the study or reported adverse events. In addition, ROM was most restricted immediately after eccentric exercise, and SOR peaked after 48 h of eccentric exercise; these were also supported by the results of previous studies (Yamaguchi et al., 2020a; Yamaguchi et al., 2020b; Yamaguchi et al., 2020c). These results suggested that the exercise task used in this study was appropriate. The shear modulus, as an index of stiffness, increased over time and peaked at 48 h. Although there was a slight difference in the time course change when the peak was shown, such as immediately after eccentric exercise or after 48 hours, depending on the difference in experimental settings (different elbow joint angle and/or eccentric exercise load, etc.), some studies (Lacourpaille et al., 2014; Lacourpaille et al., 2017; Xu et al., 2019) have acknowledged that shear modulus measured by SWE increases after eccentric exercise. In detail, the peak value of the shear modulus in this study was approximately twice that of the resting muscle shear modulus (46.6 kPa to 92.3 kPa), and this change was slightly greater than in the study by Lacourpaille et al. (Lacourpaille et al., 2014), who performed eccentric exercises on the biceps brachii (1.7-fold increase: 16.8 kPa to 29.6 kPa). One of the causes for this is the measured joint angle (i.e., muscle fiber length) associated with the muscle. Chen et al. (Chen et al., 2017) and Eby et al. (Eby et al., 2015) also stated that stiffness is affected by muscle fiber length. Lacourpaille et al. (Lacourpaille et al., 2014) had measured the elbow joints at 70°, 110°, and 160°, and the higher values in this study (elbow joint angle 180° and different positions such as the shoulder joint) were because of muscle fiber length on target muscle. UTF increased after eccentric exercise and peaked at 96 h. This pattern of time course change, amount of change, and range of values supports our previous results (Yamaguchi et al., 2020c). Intense eccentric contractions strain individual muscle fibers, resulting in the destruction of muscle cell membranes and myofibrils (Yu et al., 2003). This destruction is observed immediately after exercise, and several hours later, myofibrils are further degraded by proteases (Yu et al., 2003). Calpain 3, a protease, is expressed primarily in skeletal muscle and exists in association with titin (Ono et al., 2016). Calpain 3 has been reported to specifically cleave and degrade titin, and this phenomenon has been confirmed to induce muscle damage after eccentric contraction (Raastad et al., 2010) The delayed peak of UTF is considered to be strongly influenced by this degrading enzyme, calpain. In addition, peak UTF measured in this study showed a high correlation between peak MVC and peak ROM, which is consistent with a previous study (Yamaguchi et al., 2020a). These results showed that EIMD was induced by eccentric contraction (Lavender and Nosaka, 2006a) and that UTF was specifically responsive to EIMD. Regarding the relationship between indicators, peak UTF showed a high correlation with peak shear modulus. Titin is a sarcomere constituent protein that mainly supports the contraction of actin and myosin filaments in the fiber direction (longitudinal direction) by eccentric contraction (exercise). Also, As the structure of skeletal muscle, shear modulus (stiffness) measured by SWE has been defined as stiffness in the fiber direction (longitudinal direction) of the muscle, which is the same direction as muscle contraction including eccentric exercise (Inami and Kawakami, 2016). As one of the factors affecting the change in stiffness after eccentric exercise, increased sensitivity of muscle fibers to Ca2+ may be due to the involvement of calcium-dependent physiological processes, such as cross-bridge number or titin giant protein (Stephenson and Wendt, 1984; Balnave and Allen, 1996; Claflin et al., 1998). It is speculated that titin filaments are damaged by eccentric exercise and that the unstable sarcomere improves stiffness by shortening the cross-bridge between actin and myosin. Although the present study strongly suggests that titin is involved in the change in stiffness after eccentric exercise and demonstrates the speculation of previous studies (Stephenson and Wendt, 1984; Balnave and Allen, 1996; Claflin et al., 1998; Lacourpaille et al., 2014), there is a lack of microscopic knowledge to understand the detailed physiological relationship between the two. If this is the case, the relationship between the shear modulus and titin should also show a stronger correlation; however, the correlation coefficient is 0.648. The participants in this study performed eccentric exercises on the elbow flexor muscles using a dumbbell; however, only the stiffness of the biceps brachii could be evaluated. This was a limitation of this study. If the stiffness of all muscles that contribute to elbow flexion, including the brachialis and forearm flexion muscles, were evaluated and integrated, a better correlation could have been found. Our study suggested that shear modulus and titin are strongly related, but further studies are required to comprehensively examine the differences in physiological processes of stiffness and giant titin, including the differences in time course change (peak at 48 and 96 hours after eccentric exercise, respectively). As one mechanism, the sarcoplasmic reticulum is connected to the T-tubule system by junctophilin and is damaged by high-intensity eccentric exercise (Allen et al., 2005). Damage to the sarcoplasmic reticulum leads to high concentrations of Ca2+ in myofibers and activation of calpain 3. Calpain 3 is a Ca2+-activated protease found in the Z-region of skeletal muscles that cleaves cytoskeletal proteins, such as titin, desmin, vimentin, and α-actinin (Huang and Zhu, 2016). Therefore, it is likely that UTF in this study was catabolized by calpain and deviated into the urine. In addition, titin, a metabolite excreted due to mechanical stimulation locally generated intramuscularly by eccentric exercise, may be explained by the time difference until it could be excreted into the urine via the lymph and blood vessels. In any case, the hypothesis of this study is supported, and this is the first study to substantiate the speculation stated in the previous studies (Stephenson and Wendt, 1984; Balnave and Allen, 1996; Claflin et al., 1998; Lacourpaille et al., 2014). A significant positive correlation was observed between UTF and muscle fatigue at 48 to 168 hours. The muscle fatigue in this study evaluated the subjective muscle fatigue that participants evaluated through the perception of dullness in the muscles. The condition of tension reduction induced by movements of the degree of daily activities (low frequency stimulation) and the threshold reduction of subjective fatigue caused by tension reduction is called low frequency fatigue (Place et al., 2010). According to Place et al., (Place et al., 2010), the mechanism of low-frequency fatigue is a decrease in Ca2+ sensitivity of myofibrils or a decrease in Ca2+ release/control function of sarcoplasmic reticulum, and is considered to occur mainly in muscle tissue rather than in the middle nervous system (Balog, 2010). On the other hand, it has been reported that titin is decomposed by calpain as described above. In calpain, sarcoplasmic reticulum is disrupted by secondary inflammation occurring after 24 hours of intense eccentric exercise, and Ca2+ is excessively released into muscle cells. It is activated by being active and becomes a major cause of metabolic degradation of titin (Stožer et al., 2020). Therefore, the reason for a strong positive correlation between muscle fatigue and UTF after 48 hours is suggested as the low-frequency fatigue and titin degradation that may have been triggered by a similar mechanism (sarcoplasmic reticulum breakdown due to secondary inflammation). Although this study found a strong correlation primarily between SWE and UTF, at least two study groups need to be formed, treated differently, and ultimately compared on the effects of interest to reach clear causal conclusions. In addition, although the present results are limited to a correlation analysis between non-invasive measurements, it is necessary to conduct a detailed analysis using invasive measurements such as muscle biopsy to investigate the relationship between the two with a detailed understanding of the condition of muscle tissue after eccentric exercise in the future. Also, both methods used in this study are non-invasive tools for grasping the condition of skeletal muscle, but the ultrasonic device equipped with the SWE function is still expensive, and its portability is limited. In addition, the analysis of titin is not immediate at present; therefore, further simplification is expected. However, if the development of a highly portable and highly immediacy analysis method using the relationship between the indicators clarified in this study progresses in the future, trainers and therapists can determine the athlete's objective situation, and this may aid in the prevention of sports injuries. |