运动的肌肉记忆优化线粒体代谢,支持骨骼肌生长。

IF 4.7 2区 生物学 Q2 CELL BIOLOGY
Clay J Weidenhamer, Yi-Heng Huang, Subhashis Natua, Auinash Kalsotra, Diego Hernández-Saavedra
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引用次数: 0

摘要

锻炼可以防止骨骼肌质量和功能随着年龄的增长而下降,同时改善整体健康状况。运动还可以促进长期肌肉健康,增强对运动再训练的适应,这种现象被称为肌肉记忆,目前仍未得到充分研究。为了评估先前的耐力训练如何在骨骼肌中引发持久的代谢记忆,我们使用C57BL/6小鼠,喂食对照(CD)或致肥性饮食(HFD),进行为期4周的训练,去训练和再训练。我们的研究结果表明,即使运动量减少,运动再训练也能减轻体重增加,增强肌肉生长。训练增加了纤维大小(fCSA),在去训练时消失,在再训练时恢复,无论饮食如何,这表明糖酵解纤维向氧化纤维的转变。再训练肌肉的转录组学分析(bulk RNA-seq)显示,线粒体氧化磷酸化(OxPhos)和线粒体糖体基因显著增强,同时OxPhos蛋白复合物IV水平升高,长链脂肪酸氧化能力(ACADL)升高,再训练后1周持续的柠檬酸合成酶活性,加强了线粒体代谢的优化。虽然转录组学证据显示HFD和cd喂养的小鼠之间存在主要重叠,但蛋白质丰度的差异出现了,这表明线粒体程序的复杂调节支持生长的肌肉记忆。我们的研究确定了运动肌肉记忆超越饮食挑战并促进纤维肥大的共同和选择性机制,为促进健康衰老的潜在机制提供了见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Muscle memory of exercise optimizes mitochondrial metabolism to support skeletal muscle growth.

Exercise protects against age-related declines in skeletal muscle mass and function while improving overall health. Exercise can also prime long-term muscle health to enhance adaptations upon exercise retraining, a phenomenon termed muscle memory that remains largely understudied. To assess how prior endurance training elicits a lasting metabolic memory in skeletal muscle, we used C57BL/6 mice fed either a control (CD) or obesogenic diet [high-fat diet (HFD)] that underwent 4-wk training, detraining, and retraining periods. Our results show that exercise retraining attenuated weight gain and potentiated muscle growth, even with reduced voluntary running volumes. Training increased fiber size [fiber cross-sectional area (fCSA)], which disappeared with detraining and was recovered with retraining regardless of diet, pointing to a glycolytic-to-oxidative fiber shift. Transcriptomic analysis (bulk RNA-Seq) of the retrained muscle revealed a robust enhancement of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos) and mitoribosomal genes, paralleled by increases in OxPhos protein complex IV levels, higher long-chain fatty acid oxidative capacity [acyl-CoA dehydrogenase, long chain (ACADL)], and sustained citrate synthase activity 1 wk after retraining, reinforcing the optimization of mitochondrial metabolism. Although transcriptomic evidence revealed a major overlap between HFD- and CD-fed mice, discrepancies in protein abundance emerged, which point to an intricate regulation of mitochondrial programming that supports the muscle memory of growth. Our study identifies common and selective mechanisms by which the muscle memory of exercise overrides dietary challenges and promotes fiber hypertrophy, offering insight into potential mechanisms to leverage to promote healthy aging.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Here we provide evidence that exercise memory in skeletal muscle fine-tunes mitochondrial metabolism to respond to dietary challenges and support muscle growth. Using physiological, RNA sequencing, and biochemical approaches, we show that exercise retraining optimizes mitochondrial metabolism to increase fatty acid oxidative capacity. These findings enhance our understanding of how prior exercise primes muscle for enhanced adaptations, offering insights into strategies to promote healthy aging.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
1.80%
发文量
252
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology is dedicated to innovative approaches to the study of cell and molecular physiology. Contributions that use cellular and molecular approaches to shed light on mechanisms of physiological control at higher levels of organization also appear regularly. Manuscripts dealing with the structure and function of cell membranes, contractile systems, cellular organelles, and membrane channels, transporters, and pumps are encouraged. Studies dealing with integrated regulation of cellular function, including mechanisms of signal transduction, development, gene expression, cell-to-cell interactions, and the cell physiology of pathophysiological states, are also eagerly sought. Interdisciplinary studies that apply the approaches of biochemistry, biophysics, molecular biology, morphology, and immunology to the determination of new principles in cell physiology are especially welcome.
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