Genome-Wide Atlas of Promoter Expression Reveals Contribution of Transcribed Regulatory Elements to Genetic Control of Disuse-Mediated Atrophy of Skeletal Muscle.
Sergey S PintusIlya R AkberdinIvan YevshinPavel MakhnovskiiOksana TyapkinaIslam NigmetzyanovLeniz F NurullinRuslan DevyatiyarovElena I ShagimardanovaDaniil V PopovFedor A KolpakovOleg GusevGuzel R GazizovaPublished in: Biology (2021)
The prevention of muscle atrophy carries with it clinical significance for the control of increased morbidity and mortality following physical inactivity. While major transcriptional events associated with muscle atrophy-recovery processes are the subject of active research on the gene level, the contribution of non-coding regulatory elements and alternative promoter usage is a major source for both the production of alternative protein products and new insights into the activity of transcription factors. We used the cap-analysis of gene expression (CAGE) to create a genome-wide atlas of promoter-level transcription in fast (m. EDL) and slow (m. soleus) muscles in rats that were subjected to hindlimb unloading and subsequent recovery. We found that the genetic regulation of the atrophy-recovery cycle in two types of muscle is mediated by different pathways, including a unique set of non-coding transcribed regulatory elements. We showed that the activation of "shadow" enhancers is tightly linked to specific stages of atrophy and recovery dynamics, with the largest number of specific regulatory elements being transcriptionally active in the muscles on the first day of recovery after a week of disuse. The developed comprehensive database of transcription of regulatory elements will further stimulate research on the gene regulation of muscle homeostasis in mammals.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- genome wide
- skeletal muscle
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- dna binding
- genome wide identification
- copy number
- insulin resistance
- physical activity
- single cell
- metabolic syndrome
- randomized controlled trial
- adipose tissue
- mental health
- long non coding rna
- type diabetes
- small molecule
- adverse drug