4.0 Article

Evidence of myomiR regulation of the pentose phosphate pathway during mechanical load-induced hypertrophy

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS
Volume 9, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.14814/phy2.15137

Keywords

myomiR; NADPH; pentose phosphate pathway; redox metabolism; skeletal muscle hypertrophy

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH National Institute of General Medical Sciences [P20GM104320-07]

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The research identifies the molecular and cellular mechanisms regulating skeletal muscle hypertrophy using the rodent synergist ablation model, and examines the metabolic pathways in muscle during mechanical overload (MOV) through gene expression analysis. The study suggests that enhanced redox metabolism via NADPH production may play a key role in muscle hypertrophy induced by MOV, potentially regulated by a myomiR network.
Many of the molecular and cellular mechanisms discovered to regulate skeletal muscle hypertrophy were first identified using the rodent synergist ablation model. This model reveals the intrinsic capability and necessary pathways of skeletal muscle growth in response to mechanical overload (MOV). Reminiscent of the rapid cellular growth observed with cancer, we hypothesized that in response to MOV, skeletal muscle would undergo metabolic programming to sustain increased demands to support hypertrophy. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed the gene expression of specific metabolic pathways taken from transcriptomic microarray data of a MOV time course. We found an upregulation of genes involved in the oxidative branch of the pentose phosphate pathways (PPP) and mitochondrial branch of the folate cycle suggesting an increase in the production of NADPH. In addition, we sought to determine the potential role of skeletal muscle-enriched microRNA (myomiRs) and satellite cells in the regulation of the metabolic pathways that changed during MOV. We observed an inverse pattern in gene expression between muscle-enriched myomiR-1 and its known target gene glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, G6pdx, suggesting myomiR regulation of PPP activation in response to MOV. Satellite cell fusion had a significant but modest impact on PPP gene expression. These transcriptomic findings suggest the robust muscle hypertrophy induced by MOV requires enhanced redox metabolism via PIT production of NADPH which is potentially regulated by a myomiR network.

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