4.7 Article

Lactate Activates AMPK Remodeling of the Cellular Metabolic Profile and Promotes the Proliferation and Differentiation of C2C12 Myoblasts

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232213996

Keywords

lactate; metabolic regulator; NMR-based metabonomics; AMPK

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32271496, 31971357, 32171174]
  2. Joint Funds for the Innovation of Science and Technology of Fujian Province [2018Y9100]

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Lactate, a compound fuel in metabolism, remains unclear whether it plays an important role in muscle cell metabolism. This study assessed the effects of lactate on myoblasts and clarified the underlying metabolic mechanisms. The results showed that lactate treatment promoted the proliferation and differentiation of myoblasts, and regulated metabolisms by promoting lactate intake and utilization, activating the TCA cycle, and increasing energy production.
Lactate is a general compound fuel serving as the fulcrum of metabolism, which is produced from glycolysis and shuttles between different cells, tissues and organs. Lactate is usually accumulated abundantly in muscles during exercise. It remains unclear whether lactate plays an important role in the metabolism of muscle cells. In this research, we assessed the effects of lactate on myoblasts and clarified the underlying metabolic mechanisms through NMR-based metabonomic profiling. Lactate treatment promoted the proliferation and differentiation of myoblasts, as indicated by significantly enhanced expression levels of the proteins related to cellular proliferation and differentiation, including p-AKT, p-ERK, MyoD and myogenin. Moreover, lactate treatment profoundly regulated metabolisms in myoblasts by promoting the intake and intracellular utilization of lactate, activating the TCA cycle, and thereby increasing energy production. For the first time, we found that lactate treatment evidently promotes AMPK signaling as reflected by the elevated expression levels of p-AMPK and p-ACC. Our results showed that lactate as a metabolic regulator activates AMPK, remodeling the cellular metabolic profile, and thereby promoting the proliferation and differentiation of myoblasts. This study elucidates molecular mechanisms underlying the effects of lactate on skeletal muscle in vitro and may be of benefit to the exploration of lactate acting as a metabolic regulator.

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