Abstract

Skeletal muscle and bone interact to maintain their structure and function. Physical exercise is the most effective and easily applicable strategy to maintain their functions; however, exercise-induced interactions by soluble factors remained elusive. Our study aimed to identify exercise-induced interactions between muscle and bone by examining (1) the effects of myokine on bone and (2) the effects of osteocalcin (OCN) on skeletal muscle. To understand the effects of exercise-induced myokines on bone, we examined the effects of FNDC5 for aerobic exercise and IGF-1 for resistance exercise using a muscle-specific myokine overexpression model. To examine OCN effects on muscle, mice were intraperitoneally administered OCN-neutralizing antibody during long-term exercise. Our result showed that aerobic exercise tended to increase serum HA-tag protein attached to FNDC5 in muscle-specific overexpression groups. In addition, osteoblastic activation was increased only after aerobic exercise with HA/FNDC5 overexpression. Resistance exercise did not alter circulating HA-tag (muscle-derived IGF-1) and bone metabolism after IGF-1/HA overexpression. In the OCN study, aerobic exercise enhanced endurance capacity by restoring muscle glycogen content; however, OCN neutralization returned these to baseline. After resistance exercise, OCN suppression inhibited muscle hypertrophy and strength gains by preventing protein synthesis. Our results suggest that aerobic exercise following FNDC5 muscle overexpression promotes osteoblast activity, which may be partially caused by muscle-derived FNDC5 secretion. In addition, OCN was necessary for muscle adaptation in both aerobic and resistance exercises.

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