Coordinated Regulation of Myonuclear DNA Methylation, mRNA, and miRNA Levels Associates With the Metabolic Response to Rapid Synergist Ablation-Induced Skeletal Muscle Hypertrophy in Female Mice.
Ahmed IsmaeelNicholas T ThomasMariah McCashlandIvan J VechettiSebastian EdmanJohanna T LannerVandré C FigueiredoChristopher S FryJohn J McCarthyYuan WenKevin A MurachFerdinand von WaldenPublished in: Function (Oxford, England) (2023)
The central dogma of molecular biology dictates the general flow of molecular information from DNA that leads to a functional cellular outcome. In skeletal muscle fibers, the extent to which global myonuclear transcriptional alterations, accounting for epigenetic and post-transcriptional influences, contribute to an adaptive stress response is not clearly defined. In this investigation, we leveraged an integrated analysis of the myonucleus-specific DNA methylome and transcriptome, as well as myonuclear small RNA profiling to molecularly define the early phase of skeletal muscle fiber hypertrophy. The analysis of myonucleus-specific mature microRNA and other small RNA species provides new directions for exploring muscle adaptation and complemented the methylation and transcriptional information. Our integrated multi-omics interrogation revealed a coordinated myonuclear molecular landscape during muscle loading that coincides with an acute and rapid reduction of oxidative metabolism. This response may favor a biosynthesis-oriented metabolic program that supports rapid hypertrophic growth.
Keyphrases
- skeletal muscle
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- single cell
- single molecule
- insulin resistance
- genome wide
- transcription factor
- rna seq
- nucleic acid
- circulating tumor
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- cell free
- drug induced
- healthcare
- heat shock
- health information
- diabetic rats
- intensive care unit
- quality improvement
- aortic dissection