John Mac
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Research proposal
http://endmecfs.mgh.harvard.edu/skeletalmuscle/
A characteristic symptom complex in ME/CFS is post-exertional malaise (PEM). This condition follows physical exertion, cognitive exertion, or what is called “orthostatic stress” (a failure of the autonomic nervous system to properly balance heart rate and blood pressure when a person is upright for very long).
Typically, PEM appears 12 – 72 hours after these physical, cognitive, or orthostatic stressors. The symptoms include increased fatigue, difficulty thinking (“brain fog”), as well as increased aching of the muscles.
Since PEM follows physical exertion, it is possible that abnormalities in the muscles may trigger the condition. We propose to examine at the molecular level the response of muscles to physical stress, in people with ME/CFS and in healthy people.
This evaluation might give us insight into mechanisms of disease as well as suggestions for biomarkers and potential drug targets for treatment of PEM in ME/CFS patients.
This clinical research focus will discover and understand the multi-omic signature of the skeletal muscle from patients with ME/CFS both at rest and eventually during their recovery from mild to moderate muscular stress.
Comparisons will be made to the multi-omic signatures of healthy volunteers also at rest, during recovery from muscular stress, and during immobilization.
These comparisons will come from samples made available from our United Kingdom (UK) colleagues at the Universities of Birmingham and Nottingham.
Our hypothesis is that the inflammation-related recovery mechanisms become dysfunctional in the ME/CFS disease, and this dysregulation causes a delayed recovery of muscle after exertional stress (Post-exertional Malaise, PEM).
We intend to focus on genomics, proteomics, and ultrastructural features of skeletal muscle cells (as shown in the figure). Of particular interest are the mitochondria and their role in energy production and resolution of the inflammation that is generated by muscular stress and exercise.
It is both possible and even likely that clues for potential biomarkers for PEM will be revealed in these highly detailed studies.
http://endmecfs.mgh.harvard.edu/skeletalmuscle/