상세 보기
- Choubey, Abhinav;
- Kumar S, Udhaya;
- Yang, Tingting;
- Jager, Jennifer;
- Hong, Sungguan;
- 외 14명
WEB OF SCIENCE
0SCOPUS
0초록
Regular physical exercise extends healthspan, yet the molecular mechanisms that translate intermittent contractile stress into lasting benefit remain incompletely understood. Using global nuclear run-on (GRO-seq) in mouse skeletal muscle after treadmill running, we profiled enhancer RNA (eRNA), a sensitive marker of enhancer activity. Activation protein-1 (AP-1), a family of pioneering factors for senescence, emerged as the top transcription factor with motif enrichment in exercise-activated enhancers. Our screen in the contracting C2C12 myotubes pinpointed cFos/JunD as the primary AP-1 factor responsible for contraction-induced transcriptional changes. Muscle-specific overexpression of A-Fos, a dominant-negative mutant of cFos, disrupted transcriptomic responses to exercise and attenuated exercise-mediated improvement in muscle functions. Interestingly, intermittent but not continuous overexpression of cFos/JunD in mouse muscles mimicked exercise-induced transcriptomic changes, increased mitochondrial volume density, enhanced muscle strength and fatigue resistance, and improved glucose tolerance. These results define a transcriptional regulatory signaling pathway linking exercise intermittency to beneficial adaptations and highlight the necessary recovery cycles in training. The paradoxical anti- and pro-aging roles of AP-1 offer insights into the timing and dynamics of stressors and stress responses in shaping senescence and healthspan.
키워드
- 제목
- Intermittent AP-1 activation in muscles contributes to exercise-induced health benefits
- 저자
- Choubey, Abhinav; Kumar S, Udhaya; Yang, Tingting; Jager, Jennifer; Hong, Sungguan; Damle, Manashree; Yin, Huiqi; Zhao, Ruxing; Song, Chengchuang; Oturmaz, Ege Sanem; Tong, Hui; Puglise, Jason; Barton, Elisabeth R; Fang, Bin; Hu, Zhaoyong; Liao, Lan; Xu, Jianming; Lan, Ye; Sun, Zheng
- 발행일
- 2026-01
- 유형
- Journal Article;Preprint
- 저널명
- bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology