Abstract

BackgroundA sophisticated level of coordinated gene expression is necessary for skeletal muscle fibers to obtain their unique functional identities. We have previously shown that the transcription factor Sox6 plays an essential role in coordinating muscle fiber type differentiation by acting as a transcriptional suppressor of slow fiber-specific genes. Currently, mechanisms regulating the activity of Sox6 in skeletal muscle and how these mechanisms affect the fiber phenotype remain unknown.MethodsYeast two-hybrid screening was used to identify binding partners of Sox6 in muscle. Small interfering RNA (siRNA)-mediated knockdown of one of the Sox6 binding proteins, Trip12, was used to determine its effect on Sox6 activity in C2C12 myotubes using quantitative analysis of fiber type-specific gene expression.ResultsWe found that the E3 ligase Trip12, a HECT domain E3 ubiquitin ligase, recognizes and polyubiquitinates Sox6. Inhibiting Trip12 or the 26S proteasome activity resulted in an increase in Sox6 protein levels in C2C12 myotubes. This control of Sox6 activity in muscle cells via Trip12 ubiquitination has significant phenotypic outcomes. Knockdown of Trip12 in C2C12 myotubes led to upregulation of Sox6 protein levels and concurrently to a decrease in slow fiber-specific Myh7 expression coupled with an increased expression in fast fiber-specific Myh4. Therefore, regulation of Sox6 cellular levels by the ubiquitin-proteasome system can induce identity-changing alterations in the expression of fiber type-specific genes in muscle cells.ConclusionsBased on our data, we propose that in skeletal muscle, E3 ligases have a significant role in regulating fiber type-specific gene expression, expanding their importance in muscle beyond their well-established role in atrophy.

Highlights

  • A sophisticated level of coordinated gene expression is necessary for skeletal muscle fibers to obtain their unique functional identities

  • SOX6 interacts with TRIP12, an E3 ubiquitin ligase expressed in muscle During the formation of healthy muscle tissue, Sox6 functions to suppress transcription of a wide variety of slow fiber-specific genes [9,12]

  • What is known about this protein can be summarized succinctly: TRIP12 belongs to the Homologous to the E6-AP carboxyl terminus (HECT) family of E3 ubiquitin ligases, a family characterized by their highly conserved catalytic subunit located at the C-terminus (HECT domain) [28]

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Summary

Introduction

A sophisticated level of coordinated gene expression is necessary for skeletal muscle fibers to obtain their unique functional identities. Mammalian skeletal muscles consist of functionally heterogeneous myofibers, which can be broadly classified into two groups, slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers They differ in contraction speed, metabolic capacity, fatigue resistance, sensitivity to calcium, and a variety of other attributes [1,2,3]. Loss of a functional Sox protein in skeletal muscle results in a dramatic increase in slow fibers in fetal as well as in adult mice [9,10,11,12] These observations indicate that Sox is one of the key factors regulating the fiber type differentiation of mammalian skeletal muscles

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