Author:
Nakamura Satoshi,Sato Yuiko,Kobayashi Tami,Kaneko Yosuke,Ito Eri,Soma Tomoya,Okada Hiroyuki,Miyamoto Kana,Oya Akihito,Matsumoto Morio,Nakamura Masaya,Kanaji Arihiko,Miyamoto Takeshi
Abstract
AbstractVitamin D deficiency is a recognized risk factor for sarcopenia development, but mechanisms underlying this outcome are unclear. Here, we show that low vitamin D status worsens immobilization-induced muscle atrophy in mice. Mice globally lacking vitamin D receptor (VDR) exhibited more severe muscle atrophy following limb immobilization than controls. Moreover, immobilization-induced muscle atrophy was worse in neural crest-specific than in skeletal muscle-specific VDR-deficient mice. Tnfα expression was significantly higher in immobilized muscle of VDR-deficient relative to control mice, and was significantly elevated in neural crest-specific but not muscle-specific VDR-deficient mice. Furthermore, muscle atrophy induced by limb immobilization in low vitamin D mice was significantly inhibited in Tnfα-deficient mice. We conclude that vitamin D antagonizes immobilization-induced muscle atrophy via VDR expressed in neural crest-derived cells.
Funder
Grant-in-aid for Scientific Research in Japan
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
28 articles.
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