Role of miR-200c in Myogenic Differentiation Impairment via p66Shc: Implication in Skeletal Muscle Regeneration of Dystrophic mdx Mice.
Marco D'AgostinoAlessio TorcinaroLuca MadaroLorenza MarchettiSara SilenoSara BejiChiara SalisDaisy ProiettiGiulia ImeneoMaurizio C CapogrossiFrancesca De SantaAlessandra MagentaPublished in: Oxidative medicine and cellular longevity (2018)
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a genetic disease associated with mutations of Dystrophin gene that regulate myofiber integrity and muscle degeneration, characterized by oxidative stress increase. We previously published that reactive oxygen species (ROS) induce miR-200c that is responsible for apoptosis and senescence. Moreover, we demonstrated that miR-200c increases ROS production and phosphorylates p66Shc in Ser-36. p66Shc plays an important role in muscle differentiation; we previously showed that p66Shc-/- muscle satellite cells display lower oxidative stress levels and higher proliferation rate and differentiated faster than wild-type (wt) cells. Moreover, myogenic conversion, induced by MyoD overexpression, is more efficient in p66Shc-/- fibroblasts compared to wt cells. Herein, we report that miR-200c overexpression in cultured myoblasts impairs skeletal muscle differentiation. Further, its overexpression in differentiated myotubes decreases differentiation indexes. Moreover, anti-miR-200c treatment ameliorates myogenic differentiation. In keeping, we found that miR-200c and p66Shc Ser-36 phosphorylation increase in mdx muscles. In conclusion, miR-200c inhibits muscle differentiation, whereas its inhibition ameliorates differentiation and its expression levels are increased in mdx mice and in differentiated human myoblasts of DMD. Therefore, miR-200c might be responsible for muscle wasting and myotube loss, most probably via a p66Shc-dependent mechanism in a pathological disease such as DMD.
Keyphrases
- duchenne muscular dystrophy
- skeletal muscle
- cell proliferation
- long non coding rna
- long noncoding rna
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- reactive oxygen species
- dna damage
- cell death
- insulin resistance
- randomized controlled trial
- wild type
- endothelial cells
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- muscular dystrophy
- transcription factor
- type diabetes
- systematic review
- diabetic rats
- copy number
- extracellular matrix
- dna methylation
- protein kinase