Interleukin-15 receptor subunit alpha regulates interleukin-15 localization and protein expression in skeletal muscle cells.
Shino YoshidaTaku FujimotoToshimasa TakahashiKen SugimotoHiroshi AkasakaMinoru TanakaYibin HuangYukiko YasunobeKeyu XieYuri OhnishiTomohiro MinamiYoichi TakamiKoichi YamamotoHiromi RakugiPublished in: Experimental physiology (2022)
Interleukin-15 (IL-15) is a myokine in the interleukin-2 (IL-2) family that is generated in the skeletal muscle during exercise. The functional effect of IL-15 involves muscle regeneration and metabolic regulation in skeletal muscle. Reports have indicated that interleukin-15 receptor subunit alpha (IL-15RA) acts by regulating IL-15 localization in immune cells. However, the dynamics of IL-15 and its receptors, which regulate the IL-15 pathway in skeletal muscle differentiation, have not yet been clarified. In this study, we investigated the mechanism of IL-15 regulation using a mouse skeletal muscle cell line, C2C12 cells. We found that the mRNA expression of IL-15, interleukin-2 receptor subunit beta (IL-2RB; CD122) and interleukin-2 receptor subunit gamma (IL-2RG; CD132) increased, but that IL-15RA exhibited different kinetics as differentiation progressed. We also found that IL-15, mainly present in the cytosol, pre-assembled with IL-15RA in the cytosol and fused to the plasma membrane. Moreover, IL-15RA increased IL-15 protein levels. Our findings suggest that genes involved in the IL-15 signalling complex are enhanced with the differentiation of myotubes and that IL-15RA regulates the protein kinetics of IL-15 signalling in skeletal muscle.