Fast Myosin Binding Protein-C is a Vital Regulator in Young and Aged Fast Skeletal Muscle Homeostasis

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Background

Skeletal muscle plays a vital role in voluntary motion and locomotion. Fast-twitch muscle fibers are characterized by their rapid contraction kinetics, high force generation capacity, and a distinct gene expression profile compared to slow-twitch fibers. Skeletal myosin binding protein-C (MyBP-C) paralogs, slow (sMyBP-C) and fast (fMyBP-C), interact with myosin and actin filaments within sarcomeres to modulate force development during contraction. These paralogs are differentially expressed in muscle fibers, with fMyBP-C predominantly expressed in the fast-twitch fibers. However, the role of fMyBP-C in skeletal muscle disease states and aging remains poorly understood. This study employs mouse models with fMyBP-C ablation to investigate its significance in skeletal muscle physiology.

Methods

Adult skeletal muscle samples aged 2∼7 months from male and female wild-type, db/db, MDX, ECC injury model, were used to determine the differential expression of fMyBP-C. Next, Mybpc2 knockout (C2 -/- ) young (3∼5 months) and old (22 months) male mice were used to define the role of fMyBP-C in aging. Western immunoblotting was employed to analyze the expression of fMyBP-C and sMyBP-C and the phosphorylation status of sMyBP-C. The impact of C2 -/- and aging on the fiber type, size, and number as well as general muscle structure was assessed by immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy. The functional effect of C2 -/- and aging was measured in terms of in vivo and ex vivo muscle force generation. Lastly, RNA sequencing was performed to identify the molecular pathways dysregulated in the C2 -/- mediated muscle dysfunction in young and old mice.

Results

fMyBP-C was significantly reduced with a modest compensatory upregulation of sMyBP-C in the diseased fast-twitch muscles. fMyBP-C has a significantly higher expression in the male skeletal muscles compared to females. Further studies using young male C2 -/- mice showed a significant reduction in isometric tetanic force generation and relaxation rate, fiber type switching, atrophy, and altered gene expressions related to muscle function and metabolism compared to wild-type mice. Similarly, compared to their wild-type counterparts, aged male C2 -/- mice display significant deficits in muscle strength, endurance, and survival rate, accompanied by changes in muscle fiber size and molecular signaling pathways critical for muscle homeostasis.

Conclusion

fMyBP-C is an important regulator of muscle function and homeostasis in young and aged male fast-twitch muscle fibers. The absence of fMyBP-C aggravates the effect of aging on muscle structure and function. fMyBP-C has the potential to be a therapeutic target to modulate muscle wasting caused by aging and disease.

Article activity feed