Muscle Injuries Induce a Prostacyclin-PPARγ/PGC1a-FAO Spike That Boosts Regeneration.
Lanfang LuoYan-Jiang Benjamin ChuaTaoyan LiuKun LiangMin-Wen Jason ChuaWenwu MaJun-Wei GohYuefan WangJiali SuYing Swan HoChun-Wei LiKe Hui LiuBin Tean TehKang YuNg Shyh-ChangPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2023)
It is well-known that muscle regeneration declines with aging, and aged muscles undergo degenerative atrophy or sarcopenia. While exercise and acute injury are both known to induce muscle regeneration, the molecular signals that help trigger muscle regeneration have remained unclear. Here, mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) is used to show that injured muscles induce a specific subset of prostanoids during regeneration, including PGG1, PGD2, and the prostacyclin PGI2. The spike in prostacyclin promotes skeletal muscle regeneration via myoblasts, and declines with aging. Mechanistically, the prostacyclin spike promotes a spike in PPARγ/PGC1a signaling, which induces a spike in fatty acid oxidation (FAO) to control myogenesis. LC-MS/MS and MSI further confirm that an early FAO spike is associated with normal regeneration, but muscle FAO became dysregulated during aging. Functional experiments demonstrate that the prostacyclin-PPARγ/PGC1a-FAO spike is necessary and sufficient to promote both young and aged muscle regeneration, and that prostacyclin can synergize with PPARγ/PGC1a-FAO signaling to restore aged muscles' regeneration and physical function. Given that the post-injury prostacyclin-PPARγ-FAO spike can be modulated pharmacologically and via post-exercise nutrition, this work has implications for how prostacyclin-PPARγ-FAO might be fine-tuned to promote regeneration and treat muscle diseases of aging.
Keyphrases
- skeletal muscle
- stem cells
- insulin resistance
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- fatty acid
- mass spectrometry
- physical activity
- type diabetes
- liver failure
- high resolution
- pulmonary hypertension
- air pollution
- single molecule
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- resistance training
- photodynamic therapy
- respiratory failure