IL-15 Overexpression Promotes Endurance, Oxidative Energy Metabolism, and Muscle PPARδ, SIRT1, PGC-1α, and PGC-1β Expression in Male Mice

Author:

Quinn LeBris S.1234,Anderson Barbara G.14,Conner Jennifer D.23,Wolden-Hanson Tami2

Affiliation:

1. Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center (L.S.Q., B.G.A.), Seattle, Washington 98108

2. Research Service (L.S.Q., J.D.C., T.W.-H.), VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, Washington 98108

3. Seattle Institute for Biomedical and Clinical Research (L.S.Q., J.D.C.), Seattle, Washington 98108

4. Division of Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine (L.S.Q., B.G.A.), Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195

Abstract

Endurance exercise initiates a pattern of gene expression that promotes fat oxidation, which in turn improves endurance, body composition, and insulin sensitivity. The signals from exercise that initiate these pathways have not been completely characterized. IL-15 is a cytokine that is up-regulated in skeletal muscle after exercise and correlates with leanness and insulin sensitivity. To determine whether IL-15 can induce any of the metabolic adaptations associated with exercise, substrate metabolism, endurance, and molecular expression patterns were examined in male transgenic mice with constitutively elevated muscle and circulating IL-15 levels. IL-15 transgenic mice ran twice as long as littermate control mice in a run-to-exhaustion trial and preferentially used fat for energy metabolism. Fast muscles in IL-15 transgenic mice exhibited high expression of intracellular mediators of oxidative metabolism that are induced by exercise, including sirtuin 1, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-δ, PPAR-γ coactivator-1α, and PPAR-γ coactivator-1β. Muscle tissue in IL-15 transgenic mice exhibited myosin heavy chain and troponin I mRNA isoform expression patterns indicative of a more oxidative phenotype than controls. These findings support a role for IL-15 in induction of exercise endurance, oxidative metabolism, and skeletal muscle molecular adaptations induced by physical training.

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology

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