Cargando…

Expression profiling of skeletal muscle following acute and chronic β(2)-adrenergic stimulation: implications for hypertrophy, metabolism and circadian rhythm

BACKGROUND: Systemic administration of β-adrenoceptor (β-AR) agonists has been found to induce skeletal muscle hypertrophy and significant metabolic changes. In the context of energy homeostasis, the importance of β-AR signaling has been highlighted by the inability of β(1-3)-AR-deficient mice to re...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pearen, Michael A, Ryall, James G, Lynch, Gordon S, Muscat, George EO
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2758907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19772666
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-448
_version_ 1782172629414707200
author Pearen, Michael A
Ryall, James G
Lynch, Gordon S
Muscat, George EO
author_facet Pearen, Michael A
Ryall, James G
Lynch, Gordon S
Muscat, George EO
author_sort Pearen, Michael A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Systemic administration of β-adrenoceptor (β-AR) agonists has been found to induce skeletal muscle hypertrophy and significant metabolic changes. In the context of energy homeostasis, the importance of β-AR signaling has been highlighted by the inability of β(1-3)-AR-deficient mice to regulate energy expenditure and susceptibility to diet induced obesity. However, the molecular pathways and gene expression changes that initiate and maintain these phenotypic modulations are poorly understood. Therefore, the aim of this study was to identify differential changes in gene expression in murine skeletal muscle associated with systemic (acute and chronic) administration of the β(2)-AR agonist formoterol. RESULTS: Skeletal muscle gene expression (from murine tibialis anterior) was profiled at both 1 and 4 hours following systemic administration of the β(2)-AR agonist formoterol, using Illumina 46K mouse BeadArrays. Illumina expression profiling revealed significant expression changes in genes associated with skeletal muscle hypertrophy, myoblast differentiation, metabolism, circadian rhythm, transcription, histones, and oxidative stress. Differentially expressed genes relevant to the regulation of muscle mass and metabolism (in the context of the hypertrophic phenotype) were further validated by quantitative RT-PCR to examine gene expression in response to both acute (1-24 h) and chronic administration (1-28 days) of formoterol at multiple timepoints. In terms of skeletal muscle hypertrophy, attenuation of myostatin signaling (including differential expression of myostatin, activin receptor IIB, phospho-Smad3 etc) was observed following acute and chronic administration of formoterol. Acute (but not chronic) administration of formoterol also significantly induced the expression of genes involved in oxidative metabolism, including hexokinase 2, sorbin and SH3 domain containing 1, and uncoupling protein 3. Interestingly, formoterol administration also appeared to influence some genes associated with the peripheral regulation of circadian rhythm (including nuclear factor interleukin 3 regulated, D site albumin promoter binding protein, and cryptochrome 2). CONCLUSION: This is the first study to utilize gene expression profiling to examine global gene expression in response to acute β(2)-AR agonist treatment of skeletal muscle. In summary, systemic administration of a β(2)-AR agonist had a profound effect on global gene expression in skeletal muscle. In terms of hypertrophy, β(2)-AR agonist treatment altered the expression of several genes associated with myostatin signaling, a previously unreported effect of β-AR signaling in skeletal muscle. This study also demonstrates a β(2)-AR agonist regulation of circadian rhythm genes, indicating crosstalk between β-AR signaling and circadian cycling in skeletal muscle. Gene expression alterations discovered in this study provides insight into many of the underlying changes in gene expression that mediate β-AR induced skeletal muscle hypertrophy and altered metabolism.
format Text
id pubmed-2758907
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27589072009-10-08 Expression profiling of skeletal muscle following acute and chronic β(2)-adrenergic stimulation: implications for hypertrophy, metabolism and circadian rhythm Pearen, Michael A Ryall, James G Lynch, Gordon S Muscat, George EO BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Systemic administration of β-adrenoceptor (β-AR) agonists has been found to induce skeletal muscle hypertrophy and significant metabolic changes. In the context of energy homeostasis, the importance of β-AR signaling has been highlighted by the inability of β(1-3)-AR-deficient mice to regulate energy expenditure and susceptibility to diet induced obesity. However, the molecular pathways and gene expression changes that initiate and maintain these phenotypic modulations are poorly understood. Therefore, the aim of this study was to identify differential changes in gene expression in murine skeletal muscle associated with systemic (acute and chronic) administration of the β(2)-AR agonist formoterol. RESULTS: Skeletal muscle gene expression (from murine tibialis anterior) was profiled at both 1 and 4 hours following systemic administration of the β(2)-AR agonist formoterol, using Illumina 46K mouse BeadArrays. Illumina expression profiling revealed significant expression changes in genes associated with skeletal muscle hypertrophy, myoblast differentiation, metabolism, circadian rhythm, transcription, histones, and oxidative stress. Differentially expressed genes relevant to the regulation of muscle mass and metabolism (in the context of the hypertrophic phenotype) were further validated by quantitative RT-PCR to examine gene expression in response to both acute (1-24 h) and chronic administration (1-28 days) of formoterol at multiple timepoints. In terms of skeletal muscle hypertrophy, attenuation of myostatin signaling (including differential expression of myostatin, activin receptor IIB, phospho-Smad3 etc) was observed following acute and chronic administration of formoterol. Acute (but not chronic) administration of formoterol also significantly induced the expression of genes involved in oxidative metabolism, including hexokinase 2, sorbin and SH3 domain containing 1, and uncoupling protein 3. Interestingly, formoterol administration also appeared to influence some genes associated with the peripheral regulation of circadian rhythm (including nuclear factor interleukin 3 regulated, D site albumin promoter binding protein, and cryptochrome 2). CONCLUSION: This is the first study to utilize gene expression profiling to examine global gene expression in response to acute β(2)-AR agonist treatment of skeletal muscle. In summary, systemic administration of a β(2)-AR agonist had a profound effect on global gene expression in skeletal muscle. In terms of hypertrophy, β(2)-AR agonist treatment altered the expression of several genes associated with myostatin signaling, a previously unreported effect of β-AR signaling in skeletal muscle. This study also demonstrates a β(2)-AR agonist regulation of circadian rhythm genes, indicating crosstalk between β-AR signaling and circadian cycling in skeletal muscle. Gene expression alterations discovered in this study provides insight into many of the underlying changes in gene expression that mediate β-AR induced skeletal muscle hypertrophy and altered metabolism. BioMed Central 2009-09-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2758907/ /pubmed/19772666 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-448 Text en Copyright © 2009 Pearen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pearen, Michael A
Ryall, James G
Lynch, Gordon S
Muscat, George EO
Expression profiling of skeletal muscle following acute and chronic β(2)-adrenergic stimulation: implications for hypertrophy, metabolism and circadian rhythm
title Expression profiling of skeletal muscle following acute and chronic β(2)-adrenergic stimulation: implications for hypertrophy, metabolism and circadian rhythm
title_full Expression profiling of skeletal muscle following acute and chronic β(2)-adrenergic stimulation: implications for hypertrophy, metabolism and circadian rhythm
title_fullStr Expression profiling of skeletal muscle following acute and chronic β(2)-adrenergic stimulation: implications for hypertrophy, metabolism and circadian rhythm
title_full_unstemmed Expression profiling of skeletal muscle following acute and chronic β(2)-adrenergic stimulation: implications for hypertrophy, metabolism and circadian rhythm
title_short Expression profiling of skeletal muscle following acute and chronic β(2)-adrenergic stimulation: implications for hypertrophy, metabolism and circadian rhythm
title_sort expression profiling of skeletal muscle following acute and chronic β(2)-adrenergic stimulation: implications for hypertrophy, metabolism and circadian rhythm
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2758907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19772666
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-448
work_keys_str_mv AT pearenmichaela expressionprofilingofskeletalmusclefollowingacuteandchronicb2adrenergicstimulationimplicationsforhypertrophymetabolismandcircadianrhythm
AT ryalljamesg expressionprofilingofskeletalmusclefollowingacuteandchronicb2adrenergicstimulationimplicationsforhypertrophymetabolismandcircadianrhythm
AT lynchgordons expressionprofilingofskeletalmusclefollowingacuteandchronicb2adrenergicstimulationimplicationsforhypertrophymetabolismandcircadianrhythm
AT muscatgeorgeeo expressionprofilingofskeletalmusclefollowingacuteandchronicb2adrenergicstimulationimplicationsforhypertrophymetabolismandcircadianrhythm