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Alternative splicing regulates the physiological adaptation of the mouse hind limb postural and phasic muscles to microgravity
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Abstract
Muscle atrophy and fiber type alterations are well-characterized physiological adaptations to microgravity with both understood to be primarily regulated by differential gene expression (DGE). While microgravity-induced DGE has been extensively investigated, adaptations to microgravity due to alternative splicing (AS) have not been studied in a mammalian model. We sought to comprehensively elucidate the transcriptomic underpinnings of microgravity-induced muscle phenotypes in mice by evaluating both DGE and changes in AS due to extended spaceflight. Tissue sections and total RNA were isolated from the gastrocnemius and quadriceps, postural and phasic muscles of the hind limb, respectively, of 32-week-old female BALB/c mice exposed to microgravity or ground control conditions for nine weeks. Immunohistochemistry disclosed muscle type-specific physiological adaptations to microgravity that included i) a pronounced reduction in muscle fiber cross-sectional area in both muscles and ii) a prominent slow-to-fast fiber type transition in the gastrocnemius. RNA sequencing revealed that DGE and AS varied across postural and phasic muscle types with preferential employment of DGE in the gastrocnemius and AS in the quadriceps. Gene ontology analysis indicated that DGE and AS regulate distinct molecular processes. Various non-differentially expressed transcripts encoding musculoskeletal proteins (
Tnnt3, Tnnt1, Neb, Ryr1,
and
Ttn
) and muscle-specific RNA binding splicing regulators (
Mbnl1 and Rbfox1
) were found to have significant changes in AS that altered critical functional domains of their protein products. In striking contrast, microgravity-induced differentially expressed genes were associated with lipid metabolism and mitochondrial function. Our work serves as the first comprehensive investigation of coordinate changes in DGE and AS in large limb muscles across spaceflight. We propose that substantial remodeling of pre-mRNA by AS is a major component of transcriptomic adaptation of skeletal muscle to microgravity. The alternatively spliced genes identified here could be targeted by small molecule splicing regulator therapies to address microgravity-induced changes in muscle during spaceflight.
Title: Alternative splicing regulates the physiological adaptation of the mouse hind limb postural and phasic muscles to microgravity
Description:
Abstract
Muscle atrophy and fiber type alterations are well-characterized physiological adaptations to microgravity with both understood to be primarily regulated by differential gene expression (DGE).
While microgravity-induced DGE has been extensively investigated, adaptations to microgravity due to alternative splicing (AS) have not been studied in a mammalian model.
We sought to comprehensively elucidate the transcriptomic underpinnings of microgravity-induced muscle phenotypes in mice by evaluating both DGE and changes in AS due to extended spaceflight.
Tissue sections and total RNA were isolated from the gastrocnemius and quadriceps, postural and phasic muscles of the hind limb, respectively, of 32-week-old female BALB/c mice exposed to microgravity or ground control conditions for nine weeks.
Immunohistochemistry disclosed muscle type-specific physiological adaptations to microgravity that included i) a pronounced reduction in muscle fiber cross-sectional area in both muscles and ii) a prominent slow-to-fast fiber type transition in the gastrocnemius.
RNA sequencing revealed that DGE and AS varied across postural and phasic muscle types with preferential employment of DGE in the gastrocnemius and AS in the quadriceps.
Gene ontology analysis indicated that DGE and AS regulate distinct molecular processes.
Various non-differentially expressed transcripts encoding musculoskeletal proteins (
Tnnt3, Tnnt1, Neb, Ryr1,
and
Ttn
) and muscle-specific RNA binding splicing regulators (
Mbnl1 and Rbfox1
) were found to have significant changes in AS that altered critical functional domains of their protein products.
In striking contrast, microgravity-induced differentially expressed genes were associated with lipid metabolism and mitochondrial function.
Our work serves as the first comprehensive investigation of coordinate changes in DGE and AS in large limb muscles across spaceflight.
We propose that substantial remodeling of pre-mRNA by AS is a major component of transcriptomic adaptation of skeletal muscle to microgravity.
The alternatively spliced genes identified here could be targeted by small molecule splicing regulator therapies to address microgravity-induced changes in muscle during spaceflight.
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