Vainshtein A, Tryon LD, Pauly M, Hood DA. Role of PGC-1␣ during acute exercise-induced autophagy and mitophagy in skeletal muscle. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 308: C710 -C719, 2015. First published February 11, 2015 doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00380.2014.-Regular exercise leads to systemic metabolic benefits, which require remodeling of energy resources in skeletal muscle. During acute exercise, the increase in energy demands initiate mitochondrial biogenesis, orchestrated by the transcriptional coactivator peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-␥ coactivator-1␣ (PGC-1␣). Much less is known about the degradation of mitochondria following exercise, although new evidence implicates a cellular recycling mechanism, autophagy/mitophagy, in exercise-induced adaptations. How mitophagy is activated and what role PGC-1␣ plays in this process during exercise have yet to be evaluated. Thus we investigated autophagy/mitophagy in muscle immediately following an acute bout of exercise or 90 min following exercise in wild-type (WT) and PGC-1␣ knockout (KO) animals. Deletion of PGC-1␣ resulted in a 40% decrease in mitochondrial content, as well as a 25% decline in running performance, which was accompanied by severe acidosis in KO animals, indicating metabolic distress. Exercise induced significant increases in gene transcripts of various mitochondrial (e.g., cytochrome oxidase subunit IV and mitochondrial transcription factor A) and autophagy-related (e.g., p62 and light chain 3) genes in WT, but not KO, animals. Exercise also resulted in enhanced targeting of mitochondria for mitophagy, as well as increased autophagy and mitophagy flux, in WT animals. This effect was attenuated in the absence of PGC-1␣. We also identified Niemann-Pick C1, a transmembrane protein involved in lysosomal lipid trafficking, as a target of PGC-1␣ that is induced with exercise. These results suggest that mitochondrial turnover is increased following exercise and that this effect is at least in part coordinated by PGC-1␣.Anna Vainshtein received the AJP-Cell 2015 Paper of the Year award. Listen to a podcast with Anna Vainshtein and coauthor David A. Hood at http://ajpcell.podbean.com/e/ajp-cell-paper-of-the-year-2015-award-podcast/. biogenesis; endurance; mitochondria; Niemann-Pick C1; physical activity THE MERITS OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY are numerous and well documented. Regular exercise leads to improved cardiovascular health, cognition, metabolism, oxidative capacity, and fatigue resistance, among many other beneficial consequences. Moreover, increased contractile activity is also protective of muscle mass and function under a myriad of pathologies. Although alterations in skeletal muscle metabolism, as well as its secretome, have been documented to contribute to the pleiotropic benefits of regular exercise, the molecular mechanism underpinning these adaptations remains unclear.Skeletal muscle possesses a remarkable capacity to adapt to alterations in contractile activity, a property referred to as muscle plasticity. This type of cellular remodeling often ...
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is characterized by myofiber death from apoptosis or necrosis, leading in many patients to fatal respiratory muscle weakness. Among other pathological features, DMD muscles show severely deranged metabolic gene regulation and mitochondrial dysfunction. Defective mitochondria not only cause energetic deficiency, but also play roles in promoting myofiber atrophy and injury via opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. Autophagy is a bulk degradative mechanism that serves to augment energy production and eliminate defective mitochondria (mitophagy). We hypothesized that pharmacological activation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a master metabolic sensor in cells and on-switch for the autophagy-mitophagy pathway, would be beneficial in the mdx mouse model of DMD. Treatment of mdx mice for 4 weeks with an established AMPK agonist, AICAR (5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-β-d-ribofuranoside), potently triggered autophagy in the mdx diaphragm without inducing muscle fiber atrophy. In AICAR-treated mdx mice, the exaggerated sensitivity of mdx diaphragm mitochondria to calcium-induced permeability transition pore opening was restored to normal levels. There were associated improvements in mdx diaphragm histopathology and in maximal force-generating capacity, which were not linked to increased mitochondrial biogenesis or up-regulated utrophin expression. These findings suggest that agonists of AMPK and other inducers of the autophagy-mitophagy pathway can help to promote the elimination of defective mitochondria and may thus serve as useful therapeutic agents in DMD.
Controlled mechanical ventilation for 6 h in the mouse is associated with significant diaphragmatic but not limb muscle weakness without atrophy or sarcolemmal injury and activates proteolysis.
Besides its role in calcium (Ca) homeostasis, the sarco-endoplamic reticulum (SR/ER) controls protein folding and is tethered to mitochondria. Under pathophysiological conditions the unfolded protein response (UPR) is associated with disturbance in SR/ER-mitochondria crosstalk. Here, we investigated whether ER stress altered SR/ER-mitochondria links, Ca handling and muscle damage in WT (Wild Type) and mdx mice, the murine model of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD). In WT mice, the SR/ER-mitochondria links were decreased in isolated FDB muscle fibers after injection of ER stress activator tunicamycin (TM). Ca imaging revealed an increase of cytosolic Ca transient and a decrease of mitochondrial Ca uptake. The force generating capacity of muscle dropped after TM. This impaired contractile function was accompanied by an increase in autophagy markers and calpain-1 activation. Conversely, ER stress inhibitors restored SR/ER-mitochondria links, mitochondrial Ca uptake and improved diaphragm contractility in mdx mice. Our findings demonstrated that ER stress-altered SR/ER-mitochondria links, disturbed Ca handling and muscle function in WT and mdx mice. Thus, ER stress may open up a prospect of new therapeutic targets in DMD.
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