Abstract

BackgroundCritical illness myopathy (CIM) is associated with severe skeletal muscle wasting and impaired function in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. The mechanisms underlying CIM remain incompletely understood. To elucidate the biological activities occurring at the transcriptional level in the skeletal muscle of ICU patients with CIM, the gene expression profiles, potential upstream regulators, and enrichment pathways were characterized using RNA sequencing (RNA-seq). We also compared the skeletal muscle gene signatures in ICU patients with CIM and genes perturbed by mechanical loading in one leg of the ICU patients, with an aim of reducing the loss of muscle function.MethodsRNA-seq was used to assess gene expression changes in tibialis anterior skeletal muscle samples from seven critically ill, immobilized, and mechanically ventilated ICU patients with CIM and matched control subjects. We also examined skeletal muscle gene expression for both legs of six ICU patients with CIM, where one leg was mechanically loaded for 10 h/day for an average of 9 days.ResultsIn total, 6257 of 17,221 detected genes were differentially expressed (84% upregulated; p < 0.05 and fold change ≥ 1.5) in skeletal muscle from ICU patients with CIM when compared to control subjects. The differentially expressed genes were highly associated with gene changes identified in patients with myopathy, sepsis, long-term inactivity, polymyositis, tumor, and repeat exercise resistance. Upstream regulator analysis revealed that the CIM signature could be a result of the activation of MYOD1, p38 MAPK, or treatment with dexamethasone. Passive mechanical loading only reversed expression of 0.74% of the affected genes (46 of 6257 genes).ConclusionsRNA-seq analysis revealed that the marked muscle atrophy and weakness observed in ICU patients with CIM were associated with the altered expression of genes involved in muscle contraction, newly identified E3 ligases, autophagy and calpain systems, apoptosis, and chaperone expression. In addition, MYOD1, p38 MAPK, and dexamethasone were identified as potential upstream regulators of skeletal muscle gene expression in ICU patients with CIM. Mechanical loading only marginally affected the skeletal muscle transcriptome profiling of ICU patients diagnosed with CIM.

Highlights

  • Critical illness myopathy (CIM) is associated with severe skeletal muscle wasting and impaired function in intensive care unit (ICU) patients

  • These data show that the expression of 36% of all detected genes was affected in tibialis anterior (TA) skeletal muscle from patients with CIM and that the gene signatures associated highly with changes were identified in patients with diseases that either directly or indirectly affect skeletal muscle mass and function

  • MYOD1, p38 MAPK, and dexamethasone were identified as potential upstream regulators of skeletal muscle gene expression in ICU patients with CIM Ingenuity upstream regulator analysis was employed to study 361 genes, and a set of top differentially regulated genes among the ICU muscle samples were identified by the following criteria: p < 0.05 and fold change > 5

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Summary

Introduction

Critical illness myopathy (CIM) is associated with severe skeletal muscle wasting and impaired function in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. To elucidate the biological activities occurring at the transcriptional level in the skeletal muscle of ICU patients with CIM, the gene expression profiles, potential upstream regulators, and enrichment pathways were characterized using RNA sequencing (RNA-seq). Loss of tensegrity due to mechanical silencing (absence of external strain related to weight-bearing and internal strain in the muscle fiber caused by myosin-actin activation) causes muscle wasting and weakness. This explains in part why critically ill, immobilized, and mechanically ventilated intensive care unit (ICU) patients develop severe muscle wasting and impaired muscle function [3, 4]. The aim of this study was to investigate gene expression changes in skeletal muscle from critically ill and mechanically ventilated ICU patients with CIM to understand the pathophysiological processes occurring in the skeletal muscle from CIM patients and to provide novel insight into the mechanisms underlying muscle weakness in ICU patients

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