Abstract

Remodeling of extracellular matrix (ECM), including regulation of proteoglycans in skeletal muscle can be important for physiological adaptation to exercise. To investigate the effects of acute and long-term exercise on the expression of ECM-related genes and proteoglycans in particular, 26 middle-aged, sedentary men underwent a 12 weeks supervised endurance and strength training intervention and two acute, 45 min bicycle tests (70% VO2max), one at baseline and one after 12 weeks of training. Total gene expression in biopsies from m. vastus lateralis was measured with deep mRNA sequencing. After 45 min of bicycling approximately 550 gene transcripts were >50% upregulated. Of these, 28 genes (5%) were directly related to ECM. In response to long-term exercise of 12 weeks 289 genes exhibited enhanced expression (>50%) and 20% of them were ECM related. Further analyses of proteoglycan mRNA expression revealed that more than half of the proteoglycans expressed in muscle were significantly enhanced after 12 weeks intervention. The proteoglycan serglycin (SRGN) has not been studied in skeletal muscle and was one of few proteoglycans that showed increased expression after acute (2.2-fold, P < 0.001) as well as long-term exercise (1.4-fold, P < 0.001). Cultured, primary human skeletal muscle cells expressed and secreted SRGN. When the expression of SRGN was knocked down, the expression and secretion of serpin E1 (SERPINE1) increased. In conclusion, acute and especially long-term exercise promotes enhanced expression of several ECM components and proteoglycans. SRGN is a novel exercise-regulated proteoglycan in skeletal muscle with a potential role in exercise adaptation.

Highlights

  • 640 individual skeletal muscles are found in the human body, comprising about 40% of body weight in lean individuals

  • Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of the American Physiological Society and The Physiological Society

  • We demonstrate that many genes associated with extracellular matrix (ECM) are regulated by acute as well as long-term exercise

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Summary

Introduction

640 individual skeletal muscles are found in the human body, comprising about 40% of body weight in lean individuals. Physical Activity, ECM and Serglycin responses in skeletal muscle, including activation of signaling pathways, altered gene expression, metabolic adaptation (Egan and Zierath 2013), altered secretory activity (Trayhurn et al 2011), and changes in muscle mass and functionality (Egan and Zierath 2013). These changes include regulation and remodeling of the ECM (Kjaer 2004; Gustafsson 2011). Many muscle diseases and aging are associated with alterations in ECM (Serrano and Munoz-Canoves 2010; Lieber and Ward 2013)

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