| Literature DB >> 27215643 |
Katarzyna Goljanek-Whysall1, Lesley A Iwanejko2, Aphrodite Vasilaki2, Vanja Pekovic-Vaughan2, Brian McDonagh3.
Abstract
Ageing is associated with a progressive loss of skeletal muscle mass, quality and function-sarcopenia, associated with reduced independence and quality of life in older generations. A better understanding of the mechanisms, both genetic and epigenetic, underlying this process would help develop therapeutic interventions to prevent, slow down or reverse muscle wasting associated with ageing. Currently, exercise is the only known effective intervention to delay the progression of sarcopenia. The cellular responses that occur in muscle fibres following exercise provide valuable clues to the molecular mechanisms regulating muscle homoeostasis and potentially the progression of sarcopenia. Redox signalling, as a result of endogenous generation of ROS/RNS in response to muscle contractions, has been identified as a crucial regulator for the adaptive responses to exercise, highlighting the redox environment as a potentially core therapeutic approach to maintain muscle homoeostasis during ageing. Further novel and attractive candidates include the manipulation of microRNA expression. MicroRNAs are potent gene regulators involved in the control of healthy and disease-associated biological processes and their therapeutic potential has been researched in the context of various disorders, including ageing-associated muscle wasting. Finally, we discuss the impact of the circadian clock on the regulation of gene expression in skeletal muscle and whether disruption of the peripheral muscle clock affects sarcopenia and altered responses to exercise. Interventions that include modifying altered redox signalling with age and incorporating genetic mechanisms such as circadian- and microRNA-based gene regulation, may offer potential effective treatments against age-associated sarcopenia.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27215643 PMCID: PMC4935741 DOI: 10.1007/s00335-016-9643-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mamm Genome ISSN: 0938-8990 Impact factor: 2.957
Fig. 1Schematic representation of age-related changes in skeletal muscle and genetic and epigenetic mechanisms associated with these changes
Key transcription factors associated with maintenance of healthy skeletal muscle and age-associated muscle phenotypes
| Transcription factor | Role in muscle | Age-related changes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| AP-1 | Regulator of PGC-1α, interacts with NF-kB and MMP2 | Impaired activation with age | Baresic et al. ( |
| BMAL/CLOCK | Glucose uptake and oxidation, sarcomeric organisation and fibre-type switching, mitochondrial volume and respiration | Dampened gene expression with age | Andrews et al. ( |
| FOXO1, 3 & 4 | Key mediators of catabolic response during atrophy | Decreased activity with age | Furuyama et al. ( |
| HSF-1 | Regulates molecular chaperones | Impaired activation with age | Baird et al. ( |
| MyoD | Regulator of muscle-specific target genes involved in myogenic differentiation | Expression upregulated during ageing | Dedkov et al. ( |
| NFκB | Role in muscle atrophy during fasting | Constitutively active in old and dysregulated activation after exercise | Lee and Goldberg ( |
| Nrf2 | Master regulator of antioxidant proteins | Impaired activity and contributes to muscle atrophy, muscle progenitor function | Miller et al. ( |
| Myostatin (GDF8); Smad2/3 | Regulation of muscle hypertrophy | Not clear due to complex post-translational modifications | Sartori et al. ( |
| TFAM | Maintenance and organisation of mtDNA | Impairment of pathway with age, closely related to activity | Bori et al. ( |
| TFEB | Coordinates expression of autophagic and lysosomal genes | Key regulator of autophagy and modulation of longevity | Lapierre et al. ( |
| REV-ERBα (NR1D1) | Mitochondrial biogenesis, autophagy and exercise tolerance | Not investigated | Woldt et al. ( |
Selected redox homoeostasis processes associated with exercise and ageing proposed to play an important role in muscle homoeostasis
| Process | Ageing-associated consequences | Proposed mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Muscle contraction | Increased oxidation of contractile proteins; disrupted fatty acid oxidation due to accumulation of dysfunctional mitochondria | Changes in mitochondrial activity (Gerhart-Hines et al. |
| Disrupted autophagy resulting in defective regeneration and myofibre atrophy | Activation of autophagy (Sandri | |
| Neuromuscular function | Disrupted redox balance resulting in myofibre atrophy, NMJ degeneration | SOD1 activity (Sakellariou et al. |
| Satellite cell function | Disrupted protection against excessive ROS and DNA damage resulting in disrupted quiescence of satellite cells and their niche resulting in defective regeneration | Activity of antioxidant enzymes (Pallafacchina et al. |
| Senescence | Oxidative stress and deterioration in muscle regeneration satellite cell senescence | ROS production in satellite cells (Garcia-Prat et al. |