4.6 Article

Integrated multiomics analysis identifies molecular landscape perturbations during hyperammonemia in skeletal muscle and myotubes

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 297, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101023

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [RO1 GM119174, RO1 DK113196, P50 AA024333, RO1 AA021890, 3U01AA026976-03S1, UO1 AA 026976, R56HL141744, UO1 DK061732, 5U01 DK062470-17S2, R21 AR 071046]
  2. Howard and Helen Trevey Endowment
  3. American College of Gastroenterology Clinical Research Award
  4. Velosano grant
  5. Department of Defense [PR150084]
  6. Cure for IBD
  7. NIH [K08 AA028794, 1S10OD023436-01, R21AI153780]
  8. [K12 HL141952]
  9. [R01CA148828]
  10. [R01DK095201]
  11. [R01CA245546]

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This study utilized a multiomics approach to analyze molecular changes during hyperammonemia in muscle tissues, revealing various types of responses including mitochondrial and oxidative dysfunction, disruption of protein homeostasis, and activation of oxidative stress pathways. Additionally, novel observations were made, such as an increase in expression of antiapoptotic proteins, increased calcium flux, and increased protein glycosylation during hyperammonemia. The data demonstrate complex molecular interactions during adaptive and maladaptive responses to cellular stress induced by hyperammonemia.
Ammonia is a cytotoxic molecule generated during normal cellular functions. Dysregulated ammonia metabolism, which is evident in many chronic diseases such as liver cirrhosis, heart failure, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, initiates a hyperammonemic stress response in tissues including skeletal muscle and in myotubes. Perturbations in levels of specific regulatory molecules have been reported, but the global responses to hyperammonemia are unclear. In this study, we used a multiomics approach to vertically integrate unbiased data generated using an assay for transposase-accessible chromatin with high-throughput sequencing, RNA-Seq, and proteomics. We then horizontally integrated these data across different models of hyperammonemia, including myotubes and mouse and human muscle tissues. Changes in chromatin accessibility and/or expression of genes resulted in distinct clusters of temporal molecular changes including transient, persistent, and delayed responses during hyperammonemia in myotubes. Known responses to hyperammonemia, including mitochondrial and oxidative dysfunction, protein homeostasis disruption, and oxidative stress pathway activation, were enriched in our datasets. During hyperammonemia, pathways that impact skeletal muscle structure and function that were consistently enriched were those that contribute to mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and senescence. We made several novel observations, including an enrichment in antiapoptotic B-cell leukemia/lymphoma 2 family protein expression, increased calcium flux, and increased protein glycosylation in myotubes and muscle tissue upon hyperammonemia. Critical molecules in these pathways were validated experimentally. Human skeletal muscle from patients with cirrhosis displayed similar responses, establishing translational relevance. These data demonstrate complex molecular interactions during adaptive and maladaptive responses during the cellular stress response to hyperammonemia.

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