Piperine enhances contractile force in slow- and fast-twitch muscle.
Jon H HerskindNiels ØrtenbladArthur J ChengPeter PedersenKristian OvergaardPublished in: The Journal of physiology (2024)
Piperine has been shown to bind to myosin and shift the distribution of conformational states of myosin molecules from the super-relaxed state to the disordered relaxed state. However, little is known about the implications for muscle force production and potential underlying mechanisms. Muscle contractility experiments were performed using isolated muscles and single fibres from rats and mice. The dose-response effect of piperine on muscle force was assessed at several stimulation frequencies. The potentiation of muscle force was also tested in muscles fatigued by eccentric contractions. Potential mechanisms of force potentiation were assessed by measuring Ca 2+ levels during stimulation in enzymatically dissociated muscle fibres, while myofibrillar Ca 2+ sensitivity was assessed in chemically skinned muscle fibres. Piperine caused a dose-dependent increase in low-frequency force with no effect on high-frequency force in both slow- and fast-twitch muscle, with similar relative increases in twitch force, rate of force development and relaxation rate. The potentiating effect of piperine on low-frequency force was reversible, and piperine partially recovered low-frequency force in fatigued muscle. Piperine had no effect on myoplasmic free [Ca 2+ ] levels in mouse muscle fibres, whereas piperine substantially augmented the force response to submaximal levels of [Ca 2+ ] in rat MyHCII fibres and MyHCI fibres along with a minor increase in maximum Ca 2+ -activated force. Piperine enhances low-frequency force production in both fast- and slow-twitch muscle. The effects are reversible and can counteract muscle fatigue. The primary underlying mechanism appears to be an increase in Ca 2+ sensitivity. KEY POINTS: Piperine is a plant alkaloid derived from black pepper. It is known to bind to skeletal muscle myosin and enhance resting ATP turnover but its effects on contractility are not well known. We showed for the first time a piperine-induced force potentiation that was pronounced during low-frequency electrical stimulation of isolated muscles. The effect of piperine was observed in both slow and fast muscle types, was reversible, and could counteract the force decrements observed after fatiguing muscle contractions. Piperine treatment caused an increase in myofibrillar Ca 2+ sensitivity in chemically skinned muscle fibres, while we observed no effect on intracellular Ca 2+ concentrations during electrical stimulation in enzymatically dissociated muscle fibres.