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CDK4-E2F3 signals enhance oxidative skeletal muscle fiber numbers and function to affect myogenesis and metabolism

Understanding how skeletal muscle fiber proportions are regulated is vital to understanding muscle function. Oxidative and glycolytic skeletal muscle fibers differ in their contractile ability, mitochondrial activity, and metabolic properties. Fiber-type proportions vary in normal physiology and dis...

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Autores principales: Bahn, Young Jae, Yadav, Hariom, Piaggi, Paolo, Abel, Brent S., Gavrilova, Oksana, Springer, Danielle A., Papazoglou, Ioannis, Zerfas, Patricia M., Skarulis, Monica C., McPherron, Alexandra C., Rane, Sushil G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10313363/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37395281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI162479
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author Bahn, Young Jae
Yadav, Hariom
Piaggi, Paolo
Abel, Brent S.
Gavrilova, Oksana
Springer, Danielle A.
Papazoglou, Ioannis
Zerfas, Patricia M.
Skarulis, Monica C.
McPherron, Alexandra C.
Rane, Sushil G.
author_facet Bahn, Young Jae
Yadav, Hariom
Piaggi, Paolo
Abel, Brent S.
Gavrilova, Oksana
Springer, Danielle A.
Papazoglou, Ioannis
Zerfas, Patricia M.
Skarulis, Monica C.
McPherron, Alexandra C.
Rane, Sushil G.
author_sort Bahn, Young Jae
collection PubMed
description Understanding how skeletal muscle fiber proportions are regulated is vital to understanding muscle function. Oxidative and glycolytic skeletal muscle fibers differ in their contractile ability, mitochondrial activity, and metabolic properties. Fiber-type proportions vary in normal physiology and disease states, although the underlying mechanisms are unclear. In human skeletal muscle, we observed that markers of oxidative fibers and mitochondria correlated positively with expression levels of PPARGC1A and CDK4 and negatively with expression levels of CDKN2A, a locus significantly associated with type 2 diabetes. Mice expressing a constitutively active Cdk4 that cannot bind its inhibitor p16(INK4a), a product of the CDKN2A locus, were protected from obesity and diabetes. Their muscles exhibited increased oxidative fibers, improved mitochondrial properties, and enhanced glucose uptake. In contrast, loss of Cdk4 or skeletal muscle–specific deletion of Cdk4’s target, E2F3, depleted oxidative myofibers, deteriorated mitochondrial function, and reduced exercise capacity, while increasing diabetes susceptibility. E2F3 activated the mitochondrial sensor PPARGC1A in a Cdk4-dependent manner. CDK4, E2F3, and PPARGC1A levels correlated positively with exercise and fitness and negatively with adiposity, insulin resistance, and lipid accumulation in human and rodent muscle. All together, these findings provide mechanistic insight into regulation of skeletal muscle fiber–specification that is of relevance to metabolic and muscular diseases.
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spelling pubmed-103133632023-07-03 CDK4-E2F3 signals enhance oxidative skeletal muscle fiber numbers and function to affect myogenesis and metabolism Bahn, Young Jae Yadav, Hariom Piaggi, Paolo Abel, Brent S. Gavrilova, Oksana Springer, Danielle A. Papazoglou, Ioannis Zerfas, Patricia M. Skarulis, Monica C. McPherron, Alexandra C. Rane, Sushil G. J Clin Invest Research Article Understanding how skeletal muscle fiber proportions are regulated is vital to understanding muscle function. Oxidative and glycolytic skeletal muscle fibers differ in their contractile ability, mitochondrial activity, and metabolic properties. Fiber-type proportions vary in normal physiology and disease states, although the underlying mechanisms are unclear. In human skeletal muscle, we observed that markers of oxidative fibers and mitochondria correlated positively with expression levels of PPARGC1A and CDK4 and negatively with expression levels of CDKN2A, a locus significantly associated with type 2 diabetes. Mice expressing a constitutively active Cdk4 that cannot bind its inhibitor p16(INK4a), a product of the CDKN2A locus, were protected from obesity and diabetes. Their muscles exhibited increased oxidative fibers, improved mitochondrial properties, and enhanced glucose uptake. In contrast, loss of Cdk4 or skeletal muscle–specific deletion of Cdk4’s target, E2F3, depleted oxidative myofibers, deteriorated mitochondrial function, and reduced exercise capacity, while increasing diabetes susceptibility. E2F3 activated the mitochondrial sensor PPARGC1A in a Cdk4-dependent manner. CDK4, E2F3, and PPARGC1A levels correlated positively with exercise and fitness and negatively with adiposity, insulin resistance, and lipid accumulation in human and rodent muscle. All together, these findings provide mechanistic insight into regulation of skeletal muscle fiber–specification that is of relevance to metabolic and muscular diseases. American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023-07-03 /pmc/articles/PMC10313363/ /pubmed/37395281 http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI162479 Text en © 2023 Bahn et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Bahn, Young Jae
Yadav, Hariom
Piaggi, Paolo
Abel, Brent S.
Gavrilova, Oksana
Springer, Danielle A.
Papazoglou, Ioannis
Zerfas, Patricia M.
Skarulis, Monica C.
McPherron, Alexandra C.
Rane, Sushil G.
CDK4-E2F3 signals enhance oxidative skeletal muscle fiber numbers and function to affect myogenesis and metabolism
title CDK4-E2F3 signals enhance oxidative skeletal muscle fiber numbers and function to affect myogenesis and metabolism
title_full CDK4-E2F3 signals enhance oxidative skeletal muscle fiber numbers and function to affect myogenesis and metabolism
title_fullStr CDK4-E2F3 signals enhance oxidative skeletal muscle fiber numbers and function to affect myogenesis and metabolism
title_full_unstemmed CDK4-E2F3 signals enhance oxidative skeletal muscle fiber numbers and function to affect myogenesis and metabolism
title_short CDK4-E2F3 signals enhance oxidative skeletal muscle fiber numbers and function to affect myogenesis and metabolism
title_sort cdk4-e2f3 signals enhance oxidative skeletal muscle fiber numbers and function to affect myogenesis and metabolism
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10313363/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37395281
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI162479
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