| Literature DB >> 29925809 |
Ahlke Heydemann1,2.
Abstract
The interactions between nutrition and metabolism and skeletal muscle have long been known. Muscle is the major metabolic organ—it consumes more calories than other organs—and therefore, there is a clear need to discuss these interactions and provide some direction for future research areas regarding muscle pathologies. In addition, new experiments and manuscripts continually reveal additional highly intricate, reciprocal interactions between metabolism and muscle. These reciprocal interactions include exercise, age, sex, diet, and pathologies including atrophy, hypoxia, obesity, diabetes, and muscle myopathies. Central to this review are the metabolic changes that occur in the skeletal muscle cells of muscular dystrophy patients and mouse models. Many of these metabolic changes are pathogenic (inappropriate body mass changes, mitochondrial dysfunction, reduced adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels, and increased Ca2+) and others are compensatory (increased phosphorylated AMP activated protein kinase (pAMPK), increased slow fiber numbers, and increased utrophin). Therefore, reversing or enhancing these changes with therapies will aid the patients. The multiple therapeutic targets to reverse or enhance the metabolic pathways will be discussed. Among the therapeutic targets are increasing pAMPK, utrophin, mitochondrial number and slow fiber characteristics, and inhibiting reactive oxygen species. Because new data reveals many additional intricate levels of interactions, new questions are rapidly arising. How does muscular dystrophy alter metabolism, and are the changes compensatory or pathogenic? How does metabolism affect muscular dystrophy? Of course, the most profound question is whether clinicians can therapeutically target nutrition and metabolism for muscular dystrophy patient benefit? Obtaining the answers to these questions will greatly aid patients with muscular dystrophy.Entities:
Keywords: mitochondria; muscular dystrophy; sarcolemma; skeletal muscle metabolism
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29925809 PMCID: PMC6024668 DOI: 10.3390/nu10060796
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Muscular dystrophy progression is a feed-forward spiral between sarcolemmal pathology, chronic inflammation, decreased mitochondrial health, increased scar tissue, and decreased satellite cell function. The multiple arrows indicate that each of the five pathogenic steps directly accelerates all of the other steps, and all five directly inhibit regeneration. Black boxes indicate therapies directed at specific targets. Importantly, many of these therapies are nutritional/metabolic and can be used in conjunction with other therapies. Green arrows indicate positive effects, and red tees indicate inhibitive affects. pAMPK—phosphorylated AMP-activated protein kinase; l-Arg—l-Ariginine; nNOS—neuronal nitric oxide synthase; ASA—5-aminosalicylic acid; FTY720—Fingolimod; SERCA—sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase; Debio-025—a cyclophilin inhibitor.
Metabolic targets to treat muscular dystrophy.
| Target | Rx | Mice | Humans | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dietary supplements | Apple polyphenols | Increases slow fibers | [ | |
| Arginine & Metformin | 16 weeks of co-treatment improved clinical scores in normal volunteers | [ | ||
| Creatine | Early treatment reduced | [ | ||
| Glutamine | 10 treatment days did not alter protein degradation compared to amino acid controls | [ | ||
| 4 months of treatment did not improve DMD pathology | [ | |||
| Increase pAMPK | Exercise | Increases slow fiber types, PGC-1α, SIRT1 | Increases slow fiber types, PGC-1α, SIRT1 | Reviewed in [ |
| Increases utrophin in skeletal muscles after 12 weeks of voluntary wheel running | [ | |||
| Low intensity training improved | [ | |||
| Exercise increased utrophin in skeletal muscles of normal people | [ | |||
| Submaximal exercise increases function without causing increased pathology | [ | |||
| DMD exercise reviews | [ | |||
| Assisted bicycle training maintains function without causing increased pathology | [ | |||
| Metformin | Increased PGC1α, utrophin. | [ | ||
| Metformin with | 16 weeks of treatment caused a trend to improved oxidative stress and function | [ | ||
| AICAR | Increased slow fiber types, PGC-1α, SIRT1 | [ | ||
| Restored calcium-induced PTP opening to normal levels in diaphragm. | [ | |||
| Resveratrol | Modest pathology decline, increased Utr | [ | ||
| Transgenic overexpression of Mir-499 | Reduced pathology | [ | ||
| Inhibit Fnip1 | Reduced pathology | [ | ||
| Through breeding | Reduced fibrosis and functional decline | [ | ||
| Increase utrophin | Transgenically | Significantly decreases pathology | [ | |
| SMT C1100 | Significantly decreases pathology | [ | ||
| Safe in healthy volunteers | [ | |||
| Tolerated in DMD patients, high degree of variability in serum SMT C1100 levels | [ | |||
| AICAR | Increases utrophin | [ | ||
| Metformin | Increases utrophin | [ | ||
| Increase nNOS/NO | Transgenically | Decreased pathology | [ | |
| Reduced pathology | [ | |||
| PDE inhibitors, sildenafil | Reduced pathology in skeletal, including diaphragm and cardiac muscles. Increased slow fiber transition. | Acute treatment reduced exercise-associated ischemia. | [ | |
| Two phase 3 trials have recently been completed but failed to demonstrate improvements, chronic treatment. | [ | |||
| Increase PGC1α | Transgenic | Reduced pathology, increased slow fibers, mitochondria and Utr. Decreased CN, EBD and CK. | [ | |
| Support ATP generation ROS inhibitor | ASA | Improved ATP content and multiple functional parameters | [ | |
| Allopurinol | Initial increased creatine phosphate and ATP, and most patients retained benefits after 22 months. | [ | ||
| Unclear benefit after 27 months of treatment. | [ | |||
| Increase adiponectin | Transgenic overexpression of adiponectin | Increased slow fibers | [ | |
| Treated DMD myotubes with adiponectin | Decreased inflammation and upregulated utrophin | [ | ||
| Transition pore inhibitors | Cyclosporine A | Restored normal redox state in isolated | [ | |
| PGC1α transgene | Normalized MPTP opening kinetics. | [ | ||
| AICAR | Normalized MPTP opening kinetics in the diaphragm. | [ | ||
| Sildenafil | Normalized MPTP opening kinetics in hearts. | [ | ||
| Debio 025 | 2 weeks of oral treatment, some structural and functional improvements in diaphragm and skeletal muscles. | [ | ||
| Genetically targeting cyclophilin D, or Debio 025 | Reduces myofiber necrosis and pathology in Lama2 and delta-sarcolglycan deficient mice | [ | ||
| Co-therapies | 30 days AICAR followed by exercise | Paradoxically AICAR blunted the beneficial effects of exercise | [ | |
| AMPK/PPARγ agonists | Histological and functional improvements | [ | ||
| Exercise with AMPK/PPARγ agonists | Functional improvement in the combination group | [ |
AICAR—5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide riboside; ASA—5-aminosalicylic acid; CK—creatine kinase; CN—central nuclei; DKO—double dystrophin and utrophin knockout mice; DMD—duchenne muscular dystrophy; EBD—Evans blue dye; Fnip-1—folliculin interacting protein 1; MD—muscular dystrophy; MPTP—mitochondrial permeability transition pore; nNOS—neuronal nitric oxide synthase; NO—nitric oxide; pAMPK—phosphorylated AMP activated protein kinase; PDE—phosphodiesterase; PGC1-α—peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator 1-α; SIRT1—NAD-dependent deacetylase sirtuin-1; TGFβ—transforming growth factor beta 1; utr—utrophin.
Multiple muscular dystrophy targets.
| Targeted Molecular Pathway | Therapy |
|---|---|
| Improve sarcolemmal strength, dystrophin expression | Omega-3 |
| Decrease inflammation | Corticosteroids |
| Improve mitochondrial function | AICAR |
| Decrease fibrosis | Losartan |
| Improve satellite cell functions | Cell based |
This table uses the five main pathogenic steps of MD disease progression, as introduced in Figure 1. Effectively targeting multiple steps of the disease progression pathway would provide the most patient benefit. As stated before, many of the treatments target multiple molecular pathways so the therapies were put into the current prominent target.