4.0 Article

Sex differences in skeletal muscle revealed through fiber type, capillarity, and transcriptomics profiling in mice

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS
Volume 9, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.14814/phy2.15031

Keywords

muscle performance; myocyte; neovascularization; sexual dimorphism

Categories

Funding

  1. Arkansas Children's Research Institute
  2. Arkansas Biosciences Institute
  3. USDA-ARS Project [6026-51000-012-06S]
  4. NIH-NIDDK [U2CDK092993]
  5. UC Davis Mouse Biology Program
  6. NIH [5 R21 ES033026-02, U54 GM104942-05S1]

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The study found gender differences in skeletal muscle anatomy and physiology, with specific differences in muscle fiber type, size, and capillarity between female and male mice. Transcriptome analysis revealed significant differences between the sexes, with a focus on genes believed to play a role in innate sex differences in muscle. These findings suggest that classic X inactivation and Y activation may play a role in maintaining these differences in muscle between males and females.
Skeletal muscle anatomy and physiology are sexually dimorphic but molecular underpinnings and muscle-specificity are not well-established. Variances in metabolic health, fitness level, sedentary behavior, genetics, and age make it difficult to discern inherent sex effects in humans. Therefore, mice under well-controlled conditions were used to determine female and male (n = 19/sex) skeletal muscle fiber type/size and capillarity in superficial and deep gastrocnemius (GA-s, GA-d), soleus (SOL), extensor digitorum longus (EDL), and plantaris (PLT), and transcriptome patterns were also determined (GA, SOL). Summed muscle weight strongly correlated with lean body mass (r(2) = 0.67, p < 0.0001, both sexes). Other phenotypes were muscle-specific: e.g., capillarity (higher density, male GA-s), myofiber size (higher, male EDL), and fiber type (higher, lower type I and type II prevalences, respectively, in female SOL). There were broad differences in transcriptomics, with >6000 (GA) and >4000 (SOL) mRNAs differentially-expressed by sex; only a minority of these were shared across GA and SOL. Pathway analyses revealed differences in ribosome biology, transcription, and RNA processing. Curation of sexually dimorphic muscle transcripts shared in GA and SOL, and literature datasets from mice and humans, identified 11 genes that we propose are canonical to innate sex differences in muscle: Xist, Kdm6a, Grb10, Oas2, Rps4x (higher, females) and Ddx3y, Kdm5d, Irx3, Wwp1, Aldh1a1, Cd24a (higher, males). These genes and those with the highest sex-biased expression in our study do not contain estrogen-response elements (exception, Greb1), but a subset are proposed to be regulated through androgen response elements. We hypothesize that innate muscle sexual dimorphism in mice and humans is triggered and then maintained by classic X inactivation (Xist, females) and Y activation (Ddx3y, males), with coincident engagement of X encoded (Kdm6a) and Y encoded (Kdm5d) demethylase epigenetic regulators that are complemented by modulation at some regions of the genome that respond to androgen.

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