A protein kinase B--dependent and rapamycin-sensitive pathway controls skeletal muscle growth but not fiber type specification.
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2002
abstract:
Nerve activity controls fiber size and fiber type in skeletal muscle,
but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown.
We have previously shown that Ras-mitogen-activated
protein kinase and calcineurin control fiber type but not fiber size
in regenerating rat skeletal muscle. Here we report that constitutively
active protein kinase B (PKB), also known as Akt, increases
fiber size and prevents denervation atrophy in regenerating and
adult rat muscles but does not affect fiber type profile. The
coexistence of hypertrophic muscle fibers overexpressing activated
PKB with normal-size untransfected fibers within the same
muscle points to a cell-autonomous control of muscle growth by
PKB. The physiological role of this pathway is confirmed by the
finding that PKB kinase activity and phosphorylation status are
significantly increased in innervated compared with denervated
regenerating muscles in parallel with muscle growth. Muscle fiber
hypertrophy induced by activated PKB and by a Ras double mutant
(RasV12C40) that activates selectively the phosphoinositide 3-
kinase-PKB pathway is completely blocked by rapamycin, showing
that the mammalian target of rapamycin kinase is the major
downstream effector of this pathway in the control of muscle fiber
size. On the other hand, nerve activity-dependent growth of
regenerating muscle is only partially inhibited by dominant negative
PKB and rapamycin, suggesting that other nerve-dependent
signaling pathways are involved in muscle growth. The present
results support the notion that fiber size and fiber type are
regulated by nerve activity through different mechanisms.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Schiaffino, Stefano; Pallafacchina, Giorgia
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