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Punicalagin protects against impaired skeletal muscle function in high-fat-diet-induced obese mice by regulating TET2.

Xiangyuan MengChunyan TianChenqi XieHao ZhangHaoyu WangMai ZhangZhenquan LuDuo LiLei ChenTianlin Gao
Published in: Food & function (2023)
The function of skeletal muscles can be markedly hampered by obesity. Ten-eleven translocation 2 (TET2) is an important therapeutic target for ameliorating skeletal muscle dysfunction. Our previous study revealed that punicalagin (PUN) regulated TET2 in obese mice; however, whether PUN can prevent obesity-induced skeletal muscle dysfunction by regulating TET2 remains unclear. In the present study, 40 male C57BL/6J mice were divided into four groups ( n = 10 per group): the control (CON) group, the high-fat-diet (HFD, negative control) group, the resveratrol (positive control) group, and the PUN group. The ratio of gastrocnemius weight to body weight (0.0097 ± 0.0016 vs. 0.0080 ± 0.0011), the grip strength (120.04 g ± 11.10 vs. 98.89 g ± 2.79), and the muscle fiber count (314.56 per visual field ± 92.73 vs. 236.44 per visual field ± 50.58) in the PUN group were higher than those in the HFD group. Moreover, the levels of the TET2 protein, 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), and 5-formylcytosine (5fC) in skeletal muscles were significantly lower in the HFD group than those in the CON group; these levels increased after PUN treatment. Compared with the HFD group, the phosphorylation level of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) α in the PUN group was higher, which effectively enhanced the stability of the TET2 protein. Besides, the ratio of (succinic acid + fumaric acid)/α-ketoglutarate in the PUN group was lower than that in the HFD group (43.21 ± 12.42 vs. 99.19 ± 37.07), and a lower ratio led to a higher demethylase activity of TET2 in the PUN group than in the HFD group. This study highlights that PUN supplementation protects against obesity-induced impairment of the skeletal muscle function via regulating the protein stability of TET2 and the enzymatic activity of TET2 demethylation.
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