4.8 Article

PGC-1α a protects skeletal muscle from atrophy by suppressing Fox03 action and atrophy-specific gene transcription

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0607795103

Keywords

denervation; fasting; muscle fiber; energy metabolism; mitochondria

Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [R56 DK054477, P30 DK040561-11, 2R56 DK 054477, R01 DK 62307-01, P30 DK040561] Funding Source: Medline
  2. Telethon [TCP04009] Funding Source: Medline

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Maintaining muscle size and fiber composition requires contractile activity. Increased activity stimulates expression of the transcriptional coactivator PGC-1 alpha (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1 alpha), which promotes fiber-type switching from glycolytic toward more oxidative fibers. In response to disuse or denervation, but also in fasting and many systemic diseases, muscles undergo marked atrophy through a common set of transcriptional changes. FoxO family transcription factors play a critical role in this loss of cell protein, and when activated, FoxO3 causes expression of the atrophy-related ubiquitin ligases atrogin-1 and MuRF-1 and profound loss of muscle mass. To understand how exercise might retard muscle atrophy, we investigated the possible interplay between PGC-1 alpha and the FoxO family in regulation of muscle size. Rodent muscles showed a large decrease in PGC-1 alpha mRNA during atrophy induced by denervation as well as by cancer cachexia, diabetes, and renal failure. Furthermore, in transgenic mice overexpressing PGC-1 alpha, denervation and fasting caused a much smaller decrease in muscle fiber diameter and a smaller induction of atrogin-1 and MuRF-1 than in control mice. Increased expression of PGC-1a also increased mRNA for several genes involved in energy metabolism whose expression decreases during atrophy. Transfection of PGC-1 alpha into adult fibers reduced the capacity of FoxO3 to cause fiber atrophy and to bind to and transcribe from the atrogin-1 promoter. Thus, the high levels of PGC-1 alpha in dark and exercising muscles can explain their resistance to atrophy, and the rapid fall in PGC-1 alpha during atrophy should enhance the FoxO-dependent loss of muscle mass.

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