Molecular Landscape of Modality-Specific Exercise Adaptation in Human Skeletal Muscle through Large-Scale Multi-OMICs Integration
Author:
Jacques MacsueORCID, Landen ShanieORCID, Sharples Adam P, Garnham Andrew, Schittenhelm Ralf, Stele Joel, Heikkinen Aino, Sillanpää Elina, Ollikainen Miina, Broatch James, Zarekookandeh Navabeh, Hanson Ola, Ekström Ola, Asplund Olof, Lamon Séverine, Alexander Sarah E., Smith Cassandra, Bauer Carlie, Woessner Mary N., Levinger Itamar, Teschendorff Andrew E, Gillberg Linn, Blom Ida, Wulff Helge Jørn, Harvey Nicholas R, Haupt Larisa M, Griffiths Lyn R, Deshmukh Atul S., Pietiläinen Kirsi H, Piirilä Päivi, Seaborne Robert AE, Jones-Freeman Bernadette, Eynon Nir
Abstract
SummaryWe conducted a large-scale, statistically powered, meta-analysis of exercise adaptations in human skeletal muscles, integrating epigenetic, transcriptomic, transcription factors, and proteomic data across 12 independent cohorts comprising over 1000 participants and 2340 human muscle samples. Our study identified distinctive signatures associated with maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max), and identified five genes robustly intersecting multi-OMIC layers. Notably, transcription factors predominantly functioned as activators across these layers, regulating expression of target genes irrespective of whether DNA methylation levels were low or high, indicating a synergistic effect between TFs and the methylome. Analysis of distinct exercise modalities (aerobic and resistance exercise) revealed unique gene pathways, contrasting with patterns observed in inactivity (muscle disuse) studies. These findings offer a comprehensive understanding of exercise and modality-specific adaptations, shedding light on muscle health and the molecular mechanisms associated with cardiorespiratory fitness, aging, and disease prevention.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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