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Sedentary Behavior Impacts on the Epigenome and Transcriptome: Lessons from Muscle Inactivation in Larvae. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how sedentary lifestyles affect muscle function and metabolism by analyzing gene expression changes in larvae with a specific mutation.
  • The researchers discovered significant alterations in RNA Polymerase II binding in inactive muscle tissues, affecting around 6% of genes and notably increasing the presence of lncRNA-associated genes.
  • Findings suggest that muscle inactivity leads to downregulation of essential genes related to muscle health and metabolism, potentially linking sedentary behavior to metabolic disorders in humans.

Article Abstract

The biological mechanisms linking sedentary lifestyles and metabolic derangements are incompletely understood. In this study, temporal muscle inactivation in larvae carrying a temperature-sensitive mutation in the () gene was induced to mimic sedentary behavior during early life and study its transcriptional outcome. Our findings indicated a significant change in the epigenetic profile, as well as the genomic profile, of RNA Pol II binding in the inactive muscles relative to control, within a relatively short time period. Whole-genome analysis of RNA-Pol II binding to DNA by muscle-specific targeted DamID (TaDa) protocol revealed that muscle inactivity altered Pol II binding in 121 out of 2010 genes (6%), with a three-fold enrichment of genes coding for lncRNAs. The suppressed protein-coding genes included genes associated with longevity, DNA repair, muscle function, and ubiquitin-dependent proteostasis. Moreover, inducing muscle inactivation exerted a multi-level impact upon chromatin modifications, triggering an altered epigenetic balance of active versus inactive marks. The downregulated genes in the inactive muscles included genes essential for muscle structure and function, carbohydrate metabolism, longevity, and others. Given the multiple analogous genes in for many human genes, extrapolating our findings to humans may hold promise for establishing a molecular link between sedentary behavior and metabolic diseases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10571804PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12192333DOI Listing

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