Muscle-specific sirtuin1 gain-of-function ameliorates skeletal muscle atrophy in a pre-clinical mouse model of cerebral ischemic stroke

FASEB BioAdvances
Kiril TuntevskiJunaith S Mohamed

Abstract

Stroke causes severe long-term disability in patients due to the induction of skeletal muscle atrophy and weakness, but the molecular mechanisms remain elusive. Using a preclinical mouse model of cerebral ischemic stroke, we show that stroke robustly induced atrophy and significantly decreased SirT1 gene expression in the PTA (paralytic tibialis anterior) muscle. Muscle-specific SirT1 gain-of-function mice are resistant to stroke-induced muscle atrophy and this protective effect requires its deacetylase activity. Although SirT1 counteracts the stroke-induced up-regulation of atrogin1, MuRF1 and ZNF216 genes, we found a mechanism that regulates the ZNF216 gene transcription in post-stroke muscle. Stroke increased the expression of the ZNF216 gene in PTA muscle by activating PARP-1, which binds on the ZNF216 promoter. The SirT1 gain-of-function or SirT1 activator, resveratrol, reversed the PARP-1-mediated up-regulation of ZNF216 expression at the promoter level, suggesting a contradicted role for SirT1 and PARP-1 in the regulation of ZNF216 gene. Overall, our study for the first-time demonstrated that (a) stroke causes muscle atrophy, in part, through the SirT1/PARP-1/ZNF216 signaling mechanism; (b) SirT1 can block muscle atrophy...Continue Reading

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Citations

Apr 8, 2021·Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair·Matthew W McDonaldDale Corbett

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
transgenic
dissect
PCR
transfection
Immunoprecipitation
acetylation

Software Mentioned

ImageJ

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