Botulinum toxin-induced masseter muscle atrophy is associated with impaired autophagic flux without signs of apoptosis in mice
Esteban R. Quezada, Noelia Blanco, Paola Llanos, Alfredo Criollo, Mario Chiong, Sonja Buvinic

TL;DR
Botulinum toxin causes masseter muscle atrophy in mice by disrupting autophagy, not through cell death.
Contribution
The study reveals that BoNTA-induced muscle atrophy is linked to impaired autophagy, not apoptosis.
Findings
No signs of apoptosis were observed in BoNTA-injected masseter muscles.
Autophagy markers like LC3, p62, and BAG3 accumulated in BoNTA-treated muscles.
LC3 accumulation correlated with reduced masseter mass after BoNTA injection.
Abstract
Botulinum toxin type A (BoNTA) injection into the masseter muscle is widely used for clinical and esthetic purposes. Masseter muscle atrophy is a secondary effect of transient neuromuscular blockade induced by BoNTA. While muscle atrophy has been linked to enhanced ubiquitin-proteasome system activity, leading to increased protein degradation, the role of other catabolic pathways, such as apoptosis and autophagy, remains understudied. In the present study, we evaluated these cellular processes in a mice model of unilateral injection of BoNTA in the masseter muscle, and its relationship with muscle atrophy. Changes in neither molecular markers of apoptosis (cleaved caspase-3, cleaved PARP) nor DNA fragmentation were observed in BoNTA-injected muscles. Conversely, a significant accumulation of the autophagy markers microtubule-associated proteins 1 A/1B light chain 3B (LC3), sequestosome…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBotulinum Toxin and Related Neurological Disorders · Genetic Neurodegenerative Diseases · Temporomandibular Joint Disorders
