Abstract

Current research findings in humans and other mammalian and non-mammalian species support the potent regulatory role of myostatin in the morphology and function of muscle as well as cellular differentiation and metabolism, with real-life implications in agricultural meat production and human disease. Myostatin null mice (mstn−/−) exhibit skeletal muscle fiber hyperplasia and hypertrophy whereas myostatin deficiency in larger mammals like sheep and pigs engender muscle fiber hyperplasia. Myostatin’s impact extends beyond muscles, with alterations in myostatin present in the pathophysiology of myocardial infarctions, inflammation, insulin resistance, diabetes, aging, cancer cachexia, and musculoskeletal disease. In this review, we explore myostatin’s role in skeletal integrity and bone cell biology either due to direct biochemical signaling or indirect mechanisms of mechanotransduction. In vitro, myostatin inhibits osteoblast differentiation and stimulates osteoclast activity in a dose-dependent manner. Mice deficient in myostatin also have decreased osteoclast numbers, increased cortical thickness, cortical tissue mineral density in the tibia, and increased vertebral bone mineral density. Further, we explore the implications of these biochemical and biomechanical influences of myostatin signaling in the pathophysiology of human disorders that involve musculoskeletal degeneration. The pharmacological inhibition of myostatin directly or via decoy receptors has revealed improvements in muscle and bone properties in mouse models of osteogenesis imperfecta, osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and diabetes. However, recent disappointing clinical trial outcomes of induced myostatin inhibition in diseases with significant neuromuscular wasting and atrophy reiterate complexity and further need for exploration of the translational application of myostatin inhibition in humans.

Highlights

  • Contemporary research support the potent regulatory effects of myostatin in living organisms including humans, other mammalian, and non-mammalian species (Mendias et al, 2008; Zhong et al, 2016)

  • This review summarizes our current understanding of the influence of myostatin on bone cell metabolism and differentiation and whole bone phenotypes of animal models partially or completely devoid of myostatin and highlights investigations of the skeletal impact of genetic and pharmacological inhibition of myostatin in osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and diabetes; pulling together data from human, murine, and canine studies

  • To investigate the effect of ligands secreted from mstn−/− osteoblasts on osteoclastogenesis, mstn−/− osteoblasts were co-cultured with Wt bone marrow macrophages (BMMs) (Dankbar et al, 2015)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Contemporary research support the potent regulatory effects of myostatin in living organisms including humans, other mammalian (cattle, pigs, monkeys, mice, rats), and non-mammalian species (frogs, common carp) (Mendias et al, 2008; Zhong et al, 2016). In this study, ovariectomized (OVX) rats (a model of post-menopausal osteoporosis) exhibited increased serum and muscle myostatin levels relative to sham rats and had lower bone biomechanical and microarchitectural integrity, delayed fracture healing and elevated ActRIIB protein levels. Local or intraperitoneal administration of myostatin-specific antibody lessened bone erosion (−58, −31%, respectively), lowered inflammation (−42, −10%, respectively), and reduced osteoclast numbers (−36%) relative to vehicle-treated arthritic mice; suggesting a pharmacological myostatin-specific approach to mitigating inflammation joint destruction may be beneficial in arthritis (Dankbar et al, 2015). Circulating myostatin levels correlated with total lean muscle masses, serum myostatin levels are not considered a pathological response to T1D as the duration of TID and HbA1c levels did not correlate with serum myostatin (Dial et al, 2020)

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