Abstract

BackgroundThe formation and functioning of muscles are fundamental aspects of animal biology, and the evolution of ‘muscle genes’ is central to our understanding of this tissue. Feeding-fasting-refeeding experiments have been widely used to assess muscle cellular and metabolic responses to nutrition. Though these studies have focused on vertebrate models and only a few invertebrate systems, they have found similar processes are involved in muscle degradation and maintenance. Motivation for these studies stems from interest in diseases whose pathologies involve muscle atrophy, a symptom also triggered by fasting, as well as commercial interest in the muscle mass of animals kept for consumption. Experimentally modelling atrophy by manipulating nutritional state causes muscle mass to be depleted during starvation and replenished with refeeding so that the genetic mechanisms controlling muscle growth and degradation can be understood.ResultsUsing amphioxus, the earliest branching chordate lineage, we address the gap in previous work stemming from comparisons between distantly related vertebrate and invertebrate models. Our amphioxus feeding-fasting-refeeding muscle transcriptomes reveal a highly conserved myogenic program and that the pro-orthologues of many vertebrate myoblast fusion genes were present in the ancestral chordate, despite these invertebrate chordates having unfused mononucleate myocytes. We found that genes differentially expressed between fed and fasted amphioxus were orthologous to the genes that respond to nutritional state in vertebrates. This response is driven in a large part by the highly conserved IGF/Akt/FOXO pathway, where depleted nutrient levels result in activation of FOXO, a transcription factor with many autophagy-related gene targets.ConclusionReconstruction of these gene networks and pathways in amphioxus muscle provides a key point of comparison between the distantly related groups assessed thus far, significantly refining the reconstruction of the ancestral state for chordate myoblast fusion genes and identifying the extensive role of duplicated genes in the IGF/Akt/FOXO pathway across animals. Our study elucidates the evolutionary trajectory of muscle genes as they relate to the increased complexity of vertebrate muscles and muscle development.

Highlights

  • Regulating metabolic rate in response to energy availability is a complex and essential aspect of survival

  • Clarification of the ancestral chordate myoblast fusion gene complement We first generated a transcriptome of B. lanceolatum muscle, stimulating gene expression with nutritional challenge, which resulted in 355,725 reads assembled into 14,854 isotigs, 7556 of which were annotated, and were joined into 7352 isogroups, representing 4022 annotated genes

  • With respect to genes involved in myoblast fusion, we found that orthologues of myogenic genes in vertebrates are present in amphioxus and many are expressed in the muscle transcriptome (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Regulating metabolic rate in response to energy availability is a complex and essential aspect of survival. A period of low nutrient availability, i.e., fasting, causes muscles to be broken down by autophagy, where structural proteins are disassembled for their components This process can occur in several diseases [9, 137], and as a symptom of ageing [39]. Onset of this process involves nutrition-sensitive signalling pathways and results in changes in expression of autophagy or muscle growth genes [5] While this general mechanism appears to be shared amongst most animals, there are important distinctions between the muscle physiology of vertebrates and certain invertebrates. Feeding-fasting-refeeding experiments have been widely used to assess muscle cellular and metabolic responses to nutrition Though these studies have focused on vertebrate models and only a few invertebrate systems, they have found similar processes are involved in muscle degradation and maintenance. Modelling atrophy by manipulating nutritional state causes muscle mass to be depleted during starvation and replenished with refeeding so that the genetic mechanisms controlling muscle growth and degradation can be understood

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Results
Conclusion

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