| Literature DB >> 27793012 |
Meng Xu1, Xiaoling Chen1, Daiwen Chen1, Bing Yu1, Zhiqing Huang1.
Abstract
FoxO1, a member of the forkhead transcription factor forkhead box protein O (FoxO) family, is predominantly expressed in most muscle types. FoxO1 is a key regulator of muscle growth, metabolism, cell proliferation and differentiation. In the past two decades, many researches have indicated that FoxO1 is a negative regulator of skeletal muscle differentiation while contrasting opinions consider that FoxO1 is crucial for myoblast fusion. FoxO1 is expressed much higher in fast twitch fiber enriched muscles than in slow muscles and is also closely related to muscle fiber type specification. In this review, we summarize the molecular mechanisms of FoxO1 in the regulation of skeletal muscle differentiation and fiber type specification.Entities:
Keywords: FoxO1; differentiation; fiber type specification; molecular mechanisms; skeletal muscle
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27793012 PMCID: PMC5354690 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.12891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
FoxO1 functions on different myoblast differentiation stage
| Myoblasts mold | Functions on myoblast differentiation | Conclusion | Year | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inhibits myoblast early differentiation | Required for myoblast fusion | ||||
| Mouse primary myoblasts | Yes | FoxO1 is required for mouse primary myoblast fusion | 2003 | [ | |
| C2C12 myoblasts | Yes | An active form of FoxO1 mutant inhibits C2C12 cell differentiation whereas an inactive mutant FoxO1 can partially restore inhibition of C2C12 cell differentiation regulated by wortmannin | 2003 | [ | |
| C2C12 myoblasts | Yes | Inactivation of Rho/ROCK signaling is crucial for myoblast fusion and nuclear translocation of FoxO1 | 2004 | [ | |
| C2C12 myoblasts | Yes | Negative-feedback loop between FoxO1a and cGKI fine-tunes the progress of muscle cell fusion process | 2005 | [ | |
| C2C12 myoblasts | Yes | Interaction between FoxO1 and Notch1 inhibits myoblast differentiation through promoting corepressor clearance and recruiting the coactivator of Csl, leading activation of Hes family, which is considered to be a myoblast differentiation repressor | 2007 | [ | |
| C2C12-RasV12/C2C12-RasV12C40 myoblasts | Yes | Nuclear exclusion of FoxO1 is required for C2C12-RasV12C40 myoblast differentiation | 2008 | [ | |
| C2C12 myoblasts | Yes | FoxO1 negatively regulates myoblast differentiation through degradation of mTOR pathway components | 2008 | [ | |
| L6 myoblasts | Yes | Inhibition of FoxO1 transcriptional activity or nuclear exclusion of FoxO1 suppresses L6-mIRS1 cell differentiation | 2011 | [ | |
| C2C12 myoblasts | Yes | PAX3/FOXO1A and PAX7/FOXO1A suppress myogenesis through inhibiting transcriptional activity of MyoD-target genes | 2013 | [ | |
| Rhabdomyosarco-ma cells | Yes | PAX3-FOXO1 fusion protein inhibits rhabdomyosarcoma cell differentiation through upregulating JARID2 | 2014 | [ | |
| C2C12 myoblasts | Yes | Insulin triggers FoxO1 nuclear exclusion and protein degradation to reverse inhibited myogenesis by FoxO1 | 2014 | [ | |
Figure 1FoxO1 signaling pathway involved in skeletal muscle differentiation
The FoxO1 upstream signals including IGFs, insulin and IRS regulate FoxO1 transcriptional activity through phosphorylating FoxO1 in a PI3K-Akt dependent manner. Phosphorylated FoxO1 will be excluded from nucleus and thus loses its capacity of binding to target regulatory elements. In addition, other signals, such as cGKI and Rho/ROCK signaling, directly mediate FoxO1 transcriptional activity by phosphorylation. Myostatin, MEF2C, MyoD and mTOR are downstream factors of FoxO1. FoxO1 negatively regulates myoblast early differentiation through promoting myostatin and inhibiting MEF2C, MyoD and mTOR. Then the decrease of MEF2C, MyoD and mTOR delays myoblast early differentiation. In addition, the relationship among FoxO1, mTOR, IGF-II and PI3K/Akt pathway presents a feedback loop that can preferably fine-tune the regulation of muscle differentiation. Moreover, FoxO1 can inhibit early step of myoblast differentiation through interacting with Notch signaling and promoting corepressor clearance and recruiting the coactivator of Csl, leading activation of Hes family, which is considered to be a myoblast differentiation repressor. Notably, although FoxO1 suppresses the early muscle differentiation process, FoxO1 is required for myoblast terminal differentiation fusion into myotubes. However, the molecular mechanism in which FoxO1 is required for myotube fusion has remained poorly understood.
Figure 2Mechanisms of FoxO1 in the regulation of slow skeletal muscle fiber gene expression
FoxO1 downregulates calcineurin (CaN), CaMK and MEF2C expression, leading to a decrease of MEF2C that can increase the transcriptional activation of slow fiber genes, to inhibit slow fiber genes expression. In addition, PGC1α induces fiber-type switching from glycolytic toward oxidative fibers. FoxO1 may interact with PGC1α to inhibit certain functions of PGC1α, inhibiting expression of slow fiber gene.