Abstract

BackgroundSkeletal muscle is central to locomotion and metabolic homeostasis. The laboratory worm Caenorhabditis elegans has been developed into a genomic model for assessing the genes and signals that regulate muscle development and protein degradation. Past work has identified a receptor tyrosine kinase signalling network that combinatorially controls autophagy, nerve signal to muscle to oppose proteasome‐based degradation, and extracellular matrix‐based signals that control calpain and caspase activation. The last two discoveries were enabled by following up results from a functional genomic screen of known regulators of muscle. Recently, a screen of the kinome requirement for muscle homeostasis identified roughly 40% of kinases as required for C. elegans muscle health; 80 have identified human orthologues and 53 are known to be expressed in skeletal muscle. To complement this kinome screen, here, we screen most of the phosphatases in C. elegans . MethodsRNA interference was used to knockdown phosphatase‐encoding genes. Knockdown was first conducted during development with positive results also knocked down only in fully developed adult muscle. Protein homeostasis, mitochondrial structure, and sarcomere structure were assessed using transgenic reporter proteins. Genes identified as being required to prevent protein degradation were also knocked down in conditions that blocked proteasome or autophagic degradation. Genes identified as being required to prevent autophagic degradation were also assessed for autophagic vesicle accumulation using another transgenic reporter. Lastly, bioinformatics were used to look for overlap between kinases and phosphatases required for muscle homeostasis, and the prediction that one phosphatase was required to prevent mitogen‐activated protein kinase activation was assessed by western blot.ResultsA little over half of all phosphatases are each required to prevent abnormal development or maintenance of muscle. Eighty‐six of these phosphatases have known human orthologues, 57 of which are known to be expressed in human skeletal muscle. Of the phosphatases required to prevent abnormal muscle protein degradation, roughly half are required to prevent increased autophagy.ConclusionsA significant portion of both the kinome and phosphatome are required for establishing and maintaining C. elegans muscle health. Autophagy appears to be the most commonly triggered form of protein degradation in response to disruption of phosphorylation‐based signalling. The results from these screens provide measurable phenotypes for analysing the combined contribution of kinases and phosphatases in a multi‐cellular organism and suggest new potential regulators of human skeletal muscle for further analysis.

Highlights

  • MethodsSkeletal muscle is required for locomotion and maintaining posture and gait

  • To establish the role of each phosphatase-encoding gene in the genome of C. elegans in establishing and/or maintaining muscle homeostasis, we obtained a set of RNAi constructs against phosphatases from Source BioScience LifeSciences Ltd. and RNAi constructs against phosphatases identified using a hidden Markov model (HMM) search for phosphatase motifs in the C. elegans genome.[21]

  • This lead us to identify 198 putative phosphatase-encoding genes of which 106 were identified by both sources, 25 were unique to Source Bioscience, and 67 were unique to the HMM search; sequence verified RNAi constructs were available for 183 of these genes. Utilizing these 183 RNAi constructs, we repeated the RNAi screening protocol used to identify kinases required for normal muscle proteostasis, protein degradation, mitochondrial structure, and sarcomere structure

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Summary

Introduction

MethodsSkeletal muscle is required for locomotion and maintaining posture and gait. These roles are facilitated by the actin/ myosin-based contractile units. A little over half of the genes identified in these genes may be candidates for further study of the reguthese screens have homologues expressed in human skeletal lation of muscle protein degradation, mitochondrial fission, muscle (see Supporting Information Data S1), suggesting that and sarcomere maintenance in humans.

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