Exercise is associated with younger methylome and transcriptome profiles in human skeletal muscle

Author:

Voisin SarahORCID,Seale Kirsten,Jacques MacsueORCID,Landen ShanieORCID,Harvey Nicholas RORCID,Haupt Larisa MORCID,Griffiths Lyn RORCID,Ashton Kevin JORCID,Coffey Vernon G,Thompson Jamie-Lee MORCID,Doering Thomas M,Lindholm Malene E,Walsh Colum,Davison Gareth,Irwin Rachelle,McBride Catherine,Hansson Ola,Asplund Olof,Heikkinen Aino E,Piirilä Päivi,Pietiläinen Kirsi H,Ollikainen Miina,Blocquiaux Sara,Thomis MartineORCID,Coletta Dawn K,Sharples Adam PORCID,Eynon NirORCID

Abstract

AbstractExercise training prevents age-related decline in muscle function. Targeting epigenetic aging is a promising actionable mechanism and late-life exercise mitigates epigenetic aging in rodent muscle. Whether exercise training can decelerate, or reverse epigenetic aging in humans is unknown. Here, we performed a powerful meta-analysis of the methylome and transcriptome of an unprecedented number of human skeletal muscle samples (n = 3,176). We show that: 1) individuals with higher baseline aerobic fitness have younger epigenetic and transcriptomic profiles, 2) exercise training leads to significant shifts of epigenetic and transcriptomic patterns towards a younger profile, and 3) muscle disuse “ages” the transcriptome. Higher fitness levels were associated with attenuated differential methylation and transcription during aging. Furthermore, both epigenetic and transcriptomic profiles shifted towards a younger state after exercise training interventions, while the transcriptome shifted towards an older state after forced muscle disuse. We demonstrate that exercise training targets many of the age-related transcripts and DNA methylation loci to maintain younger methylome and transcriptome profiles, specifically in genes related to muscle structure, metabolism and mitochondrial function. Our comprehensive analysis will inform future studies aiming to identify the best combination of therapeutics and exercise regimes to optimize longevity.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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