AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the role of the ubiquitin ligase MuRF1 in muscle-wasting conditions like diabetes and starvation, focusing on its impact on carbohydrate metabolism in skeletal muscle.
  • MuRF1-TG mice, which over-express MuRF1 in skeletal muscle, show normal muscle weights and fertility but lower levels of critical glycolysis enzymes, suggesting MuRF1 may influence metabolic processes.
  • Results from glucose tolerance tests indicate that MuRF1 expression in muscle enhances insulin secretion and shifts glycogen synthesis from muscle to the liver, illustrating a connection between muscle and hepatic metabolism during metabolic stress.

Article Abstract

Under various pathophysiological muscle-wasting conditions, such as diabetes and starvation, a family of ubiquitin ligases, including muscle-specific RING-finger protein 1 (MuRF1), are induced to target muscle proteins for degradation via ubiquitination. We have generated transgenic mouse lines over-expressing MuRF1 in a skeletal muscle-specific fashion (MuRF1-TG mice) in an attempt to identify the in vivo targets of MuRF1. MuRF1-TG lines were viable, had normal fertility and normal muscle weights at eight weeks of age. Comparison of quadriceps from MuRF1-TG and wild type mice did not reveal elevated multi-ubiquitination of myosin as observed in human patients with muscle wasting. Instead, MuRF1-TG mice expressed lower levels of pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH), a mitochondrial key enzyme in charge of glycolysis, and of its regulator PDK2. Furthermore, yeast two-hybrid interaction studies demonstrated the interaction of MuRF1 with PDH, PDK2, PDK4, PKM2 (all participating in glycolysis) and with phosphorylase beta (PYGM) and glycogenin (both regulating glycogen metabolism). Consistent with the idea that MuRF1 may regulate carbohydrate metabolism, MuRF1-TG mice had twofold elevated insulin blood levels and lower hepatic glycogen contents. To further examine MuRF1's role for systemic carbohydrate regulation, we performed glucose tolerance tests (GTT) in wild type and MuRF1-TG mice. During GTT, MuRF1-TG mice developed striking hyperinsulinaemia and hepatic glycogen stores, that were depleted at basal levels, became rapidly replenished. Taken together, our data demonstrate that MuRF1 expression in skeletal muscle re-directs glycogen synthesis to the liver and stimulates pancreatic insulin secretion, thereby providing a regulatory feedback loop that connects skeletal muscle metabolism with the liver and the pancreas during metabolic stress.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2008.03.049DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the role of the ubiquitin ligase MuRF1 in muscle-wasting conditions like diabetes and starvation, focusing on its impact on carbohydrate metabolism in skeletal muscle.
  • MuRF1-TG mice, which over-express MuRF1 in skeletal muscle, show normal muscle weights and fertility but lower levels of critical glycolysis enzymes, suggesting MuRF1 may influence metabolic processes.
  • Results from glucose tolerance tests indicate that MuRF1 expression in muscle enhances insulin secretion and shifts glycogen synthesis from muscle to the liver, illustrating a connection between muscle and hepatic metabolism during metabolic stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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