Equine skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise and training: evidence of differential regulation of autophagosomal and mitochondrial components

Abstract Background A single bout of exercise induces changes in gene expression in skeletal muscle. Regular exercise results in an adaptive response involving changes in muscle architecture and biochemistry, and is an effective way to manage and prevent common human diseases such as obesity, cardio...

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Main Authors: Kenneth Bryan, Beatrice A. McGivney, Gabriella Farries, Paul A. McGettigan, Charlotte L. McGivney, Katie F. Gough, David E. MacHugh, Lisa M. Katz, Emmeline W. Hill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-08-01
Series:BMC Genomics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-017-4007-9
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spelling doaj-2f821a3915dc407cb1c43b1db16fc0832020-11-24T23:01:15ZengBMCBMC Genomics1471-21642017-08-0118112610.1186/s12864-017-4007-9Equine skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise and training: evidence of differential regulation of autophagosomal and mitochondrial componentsKenneth Bryan0Beatrice A. McGivney1Gabriella Farries2Paul A. McGettigan3Charlotte L. McGivney4Katie F. Gough5David E. MacHugh6Lisa M. Katz7Emmeline W. Hill8UCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, University College DublinUCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, University College DublinUCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, University College DublinUCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, University College DublinUCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, University College DublinUCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, University College DublinUCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, University College DublinUCD School of Veterinary Medicine, University College DublinUCD School of Agriculture and Food Science, University College DublinAbstract Background A single bout of exercise induces changes in gene expression in skeletal muscle. Regular exercise results in an adaptive response involving changes in muscle architecture and biochemistry, and is an effective way to manage and prevent common human diseases such as obesity, cardiovascular disorders and type II diabetes. However, the biomolecular mechanisms underlying such responses still need to be fully elucidated. Here we performed a transcriptome-wide analysis of skeletal muscle tissue in a large cohort of untrained Thoroughbred horses (n = 51) before and after a bout of high-intensity exercise and again after an extended period of training. We hypothesized that regular high-intensity exercise training primes the transcriptome for the demands of high-intensity exercise. Results An extensive set of genes was observed to be significantly differentially regulated in response to a single bout of high-intensity exercise in the untrained cohort (3241 genes) and following multiple bouts of high-intensity exercise training over a six-month period (3405 genes). Approximately one-third of these genes (1025) and several biological processes related to energy metabolism were common to both the exercise and training responses. We then developed a novel network-based computational analysis pipeline to test the hypothesis that these transcriptional changes also influence the contextual molecular interactome and its dynamics in response to exercise and training. The contextual network analysis identified several important hub genes, including the autophagosomal-related gene GABARAPL1, and dynamic functional modules, including those enriched for mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes I and V, that were differentially regulated and had their putative interactions ‘re-wired’ in the exercise and/or training responses. Conclusion Here we have generated for the first time, a comprehensive set of genes that are differentially expressed in Thoroughbred skeletal muscle in response to both exercise and training. These data indicate that consecutive bouts of high-intensity exercise result in a priming of the skeletal muscle transcriptome for the demands of the next exercise bout. Furthermore, this may also lead to an extensive ‘re-wiring’ of the molecular interactome in both exercise and training and include key genes and functional modules related to autophagy and the mitochondrion.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-017-4007-9EquineSkeletal muscleTranscriptomeExerciseTrainingRNAseq
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kenneth Bryan
Beatrice A. McGivney
Gabriella Farries
Paul A. McGettigan
Charlotte L. McGivney
Katie F. Gough
David E. MacHugh
Lisa M. Katz
Emmeline W. Hill
spellingShingle Kenneth Bryan
Beatrice A. McGivney
Gabriella Farries
Paul A. McGettigan
Charlotte L. McGivney
Katie F. Gough
David E. MacHugh
Lisa M. Katz
Emmeline W. Hill
Equine skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise and training: evidence of differential regulation of autophagosomal and mitochondrial components
BMC Genomics
Equine
Skeletal muscle
Transcriptome
Exercise
Training
RNAseq
author_facet Kenneth Bryan
Beatrice A. McGivney
Gabriella Farries
Paul A. McGettigan
Charlotte L. McGivney
Katie F. Gough
David E. MacHugh
Lisa M. Katz
Emmeline W. Hill
author_sort Kenneth Bryan
title Equine skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise and training: evidence of differential regulation of autophagosomal and mitochondrial components
title_short Equine skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise and training: evidence of differential regulation of autophagosomal and mitochondrial components
title_full Equine skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise and training: evidence of differential regulation of autophagosomal and mitochondrial components
title_fullStr Equine skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise and training: evidence of differential regulation of autophagosomal and mitochondrial components
title_full_unstemmed Equine skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise and training: evidence of differential regulation of autophagosomal and mitochondrial components
title_sort equine skeletal muscle adaptations to exercise and training: evidence of differential regulation of autophagosomal and mitochondrial components
publisher BMC
series BMC Genomics
issn 1471-2164
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Abstract Background A single bout of exercise induces changes in gene expression in skeletal muscle. Regular exercise results in an adaptive response involving changes in muscle architecture and biochemistry, and is an effective way to manage and prevent common human diseases such as obesity, cardiovascular disorders and type II diabetes. However, the biomolecular mechanisms underlying such responses still need to be fully elucidated. Here we performed a transcriptome-wide analysis of skeletal muscle tissue in a large cohort of untrained Thoroughbred horses (n = 51) before and after a bout of high-intensity exercise and again after an extended period of training. We hypothesized that regular high-intensity exercise training primes the transcriptome for the demands of high-intensity exercise. Results An extensive set of genes was observed to be significantly differentially regulated in response to a single bout of high-intensity exercise in the untrained cohort (3241 genes) and following multiple bouts of high-intensity exercise training over a six-month period (3405 genes). Approximately one-third of these genes (1025) and several biological processes related to energy metabolism were common to both the exercise and training responses. We then developed a novel network-based computational analysis pipeline to test the hypothesis that these transcriptional changes also influence the contextual molecular interactome and its dynamics in response to exercise and training. The contextual network analysis identified several important hub genes, including the autophagosomal-related gene GABARAPL1, and dynamic functional modules, including those enriched for mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes I and V, that were differentially regulated and had their putative interactions ‘re-wired’ in the exercise and/or training responses. Conclusion Here we have generated for the first time, a comprehensive set of genes that are differentially expressed in Thoroughbred skeletal muscle in response to both exercise and training. These data indicate that consecutive bouts of high-intensity exercise result in a priming of the skeletal muscle transcriptome for the demands of the next exercise bout. Furthermore, this may also lead to an extensive ‘re-wiring’ of the molecular interactome in both exercise and training and include key genes and functional modules related to autophagy and the mitochondrion.
topic Equine
Skeletal muscle
Transcriptome
Exercise
Training
RNAseq
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-017-4007-9
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