Author:
Henrich Mason,Ha Pin,Wang Yuanyuan,Ting Kang,Stodieck Louis,Soo Chia,Adams John S.,Chun Rene
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundAs the interest in manned spaceflight increases, so does the requirement to understand the transcriptomic mechanisms that underlay the detrimental physiological adaptations of skeletal muscle to microgravity. While microgravity-induced differential gene expression (DGE) has been extensively investigated, the contribution of differential alternative splicing (DAS) to the plasticity and functional status of the skeletal muscle transcriptome has not been studied in an animal model. Therefore, by evaluating both DGE and DAS across spaceflight, we set out to provide the first comprehensive characterization of the transcriptomic landscape of skeletal muscle during exposure to microgravity.MethodsRNA-sequencing, immunohistochemistry, and morphological analyses were conducted utilizing total RNA and tissue sections isolated from the gastrocnemius and quadriceps muscles of 30-week-old female BALB/c mice exposed to microgravity or ground control conditions for 9 weeks.ResultsIn response to microgravity, the skeletal muscle transcriptome was remodeled via both DGE and DAS. Importantly, while DGE showed variable gene network enrichment, DAS was enriched in structural and functional gene networks of skeletal muscle, resulting in the expression of alternatively spliced transcript isoforms that have been associated with the physiological changes to skeletal muscle in microgravity, including muscle atrophy and altered fiber type function. Finally, RNA-binding proteins, which are required for regulation of pre-mRNA splicing, were themselves differentially spliced but not differentially expressed, an upstream event that is speculated to account for the downstream splicing changes identified in target skeletal muscle genes.ConclusionsOur work serves as the first investigation of coordinate changes in DGE and DAS in large limb muscles across spaceflight. It opens up a new opportunity to understand (i) the molecular mechanisms by which splice variants of skeletal muscle genes regulate the physiological adaptations of skeletal muscle to microgravity and (ii) how small molecule splicing regulator therapies might thwart muscle atrophy and alterations to fiber type function during prolonged spaceflight.
Funder
Center for the Advancement of Science in Space
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
Reference114 articles.
1. Von Braun W. Space medicine: the human factor in flights beyond the Earth. Urbana: University of Illinois Press; 1951.
2. Adams GR, Caiozzo VJ, Baldwin KM. Skeletal muscle unweighting: spaceflight and ground-based models. J Appl Physiol. 2003;95(6):2185–201.
3. Sandonà D, Desaphy J-F, Camerino GM, Bianchini E, Ciciliot S, Danieli-Betto D, et al. Adaptation of mouse skeletal muscle to long-term microgravity in the MDS mission. PLoS One. 2012;7(3):e33232.
4. Martin TP, Edgerton VR, Grindeland RE. Influence of spaceflight on rat skeletal muscle. J Appl Physiol. 1988;65(5):2318–25.
5. Shenkman BS, Desplanches D, Nemirovskaya TL, Kuznetsov SL, Kozlovskaya IB. Plasticity of skeletal muscle fibres in space-flown primates. J Gravit Physiol. 1994;1:P64–6.
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献