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Muscle-Specific Cellular and Molecular Adaptations to Late-Life Voluntary Concurrent Exercise

Murine exercise models can provide information on factors that influence muscle adaptability with aging, but few translatable solutions exist. Progressive weighted wheel running (PoWeR) is a simple, voluntary, low-cost, high-volume endurance/resistance exercise approach for training young mice. In t...

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Autores principales: Dungan, Cory M, Brightwell, Camille R, Wen, Yuan, Zdunek, Christopher J, Latham, Christine M, Thomas, Nicholas T, Zagzoog, Alyaa M, Brightwell, Benjamin D, Nolt, Georgia L, Keeble, Alexander R, Watowich, Stanley J, Murach, Kevin A, Fry, Christopher S
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9233305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35774589
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/function/zqac027
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author Dungan, Cory M
Brightwell, Camille R
Wen, Yuan
Zdunek, Christopher J
Latham, Christine M
Thomas, Nicholas T
Zagzoog, Alyaa M
Brightwell, Benjamin D
Nolt, Georgia L
Keeble, Alexander R
Watowich, Stanley J
Murach, Kevin A
Fry, Christopher S
author_facet Dungan, Cory M
Brightwell, Camille R
Wen, Yuan
Zdunek, Christopher J
Latham, Christine M
Thomas, Nicholas T
Zagzoog, Alyaa M
Brightwell, Benjamin D
Nolt, Georgia L
Keeble, Alexander R
Watowich, Stanley J
Murach, Kevin A
Fry, Christopher S
author_sort Dungan, Cory M
collection PubMed
description Murine exercise models can provide information on factors that influence muscle adaptability with aging, but few translatable solutions exist. Progressive weighted wheel running (PoWeR) is a simple, voluntary, low-cost, high-volume endurance/resistance exercise approach for training young mice. In the current investigation, aged mice (22-mo-old) underwent a modified version of PoWeR for 8 wk. Muscle functional, cellular, biochemical, transcriptional, and myonuclear DNA methylation analyses provide an encompassing picture of how muscle from aged mice responds to high-volume combined training. Mice run 6–8 km/d, and relative to sedentary mice, PoWeR increases plantarflexor muscle strength. The oxidative soleus of aged mice responds to PoWeR similarly to young mice in every parameter measured in previous work; this includes muscle mass, glycolytic-to-oxidative fiber type transitioning, fiber size, satellite cell frequency, and myonuclear number. The oxidative/glycolytic plantaris adapts according to fiber type, but with modest overall changes in muscle mass. Capillarity increases markedly with PoWeR in both muscles, which may be permissive for adaptability in advanced age. Comparison to published PoWeR RNA-sequencing data in young mice identified conserved regulators of adaptability across age and muscles; this includes Aldh1l1 which associates with muscle vasculature. Agrn and Samd1 gene expression is upregulated after PoWeR simultaneous with a hypomethylated promoter CpG in myonuclear DNA, which could have implications for innervation and capillarization. A promoter CpG in Rbm10 is hypomethylated by late-life exercise in myonuclei, consistent with findings in muscle tissue. PoWeR and the data herein are a resource for uncovering cellular and molecular regulators of muscle adaptation with aging.
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spelling pubmed-92333052022-06-28 Muscle-Specific Cellular and Molecular Adaptations to Late-Life Voluntary Concurrent Exercise Dungan, Cory M Brightwell, Camille R Wen, Yuan Zdunek, Christopher J Latham, Christine M Thomas, Nicholas T Zagzoog, Alyaa M Brightwell, Benjamin D Nolt, Georgia L Keeble, Alexander R Watowich, Stanley J Murach, Kevin A Fry, Christopher S Function (Oxf) Research Article Murine exercise models can provide information on factors that influence muscle adaptability with aging, but few translatable solutions exist. Progressive weighted wheel running (PoWeR) is a simple, voluntary, low-cost, high-volume endurance/resistance exercise approach for training young mice. In the current investigation, aged mice (22-mo-old) underwent a modified version of PoWeR for 8 wk. Muscle functional, cellular, biochemical, transcriptional, and myonuclear DNA methylation analyses provide an encompassing picture of how muscle from aged mice responds to high-volume combined training. Mice run 6–8 km/d, and relative to sedentary mice, PoWeR increases plantarflexor muscle strength. The oxidative soleus of aged mice responds to PoWeR similarly to young mice in every parameter measured in previous work; this includes muscle mass, glycolytic-to-oxidative fiber type transitioning, fiber size, satellite cell frequency, and myonuclear number. The oxidative/glycolytic plantaris adapts according to fiber type, but with modest overall changes in muscle mass. Capillarity increases markedly with PoWeR in both muscles, which may be permissive for adaptability in advanced age. Comparison to published PoWeR RNA-sequencing data in young mice identified conserved regulators of adaptability across age and muscles; this includes Aldh1l1 which associates with muscle vasculature. Agrn and Samd1 gene expression is upregulated after PoWeR simultaneous with a hypomethylated promoter CpG in myonuclear DNA, which could have implications for innervation and capillarization. A promoter CpG in Rbm10 is hypomethylated by late-life exercise in myonuclei, consistent with findings in muscle tissue. PoWeR and the data herein are a resource for uncovering cellular and molecular regulators of muscle adaptation with aging. Oxford University Press 2022-05-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9233305/ /pubmed/35774589 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/function/zqac027 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of American Physiological Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Research Article
Dungan, Cory M
Brightwell, Camille R
Wen, Yuan
Zdunek, Christopher J
Latham, Christine M
Thomas, Nicholas T
Zagzoog, Alyaa M
Brightwell, Benjamin D
Nolt, Georgia L
Keeble, Alexander R
Watowich, Stanley J
Murach, Kevin A
Fry, Christopher S
Muscle-Specific Cellular and Molecular Adaptations to Late-Life Voluntary Concurrent Exercise
title Muscle-Specific Cellular and Molecular Adaptations to Late-Life Voluntary Concurrent Exercise
title_full Muscle-Specific Cellular and Molecular Adaptations to Late-Life Voluntary Concurrent Exercise
title_fullStr Muscle-Specific Cellular and Molecular Adaptations to Late-Life Voluntary Concurrent Exercise
title_full_unstemmed Muscle-Specific Cellular and Molecular Adaptations to Late-Life Voluntary Concurrent Exercise
title_short Muscle-Specific Cellular and Molecular Adaptations to Late-Life Voluntary Concurrent Exercise
title_sort muscle-specific cellular and molecular adaptations to late-life voluntary concurrent exercise
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9233305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35774589
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/function/zqac027
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