1. CHCHD4-TRIAP1 regulation of innate immune signaling mediates skeletal muscle adaptation to exercise.
- Author
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Ma, Jin, Wang, Ping-yuan, Zhuang, Jie, Son, Annie Y., Karius, Alexander K., Syed, Abu Mohammad, Nishi, Masahiro, Wu, Zhichao, Mori, Mateus P., Kim, Young-Chae, and Hwang, Paul M.
- Abstract
Exercise training can stimulate the formation of fatty-acid-oxidizing slow-twitch skeletal muscle fibers, which are inversely correlated with obesity, but the molecular mechanism underlying this transformation requires further elucidation. Here, we report that the downregulation of the mitochondrial disulfide relay carrier CHCHD4 by exercise training decreases the import of TP53-regulated inhibitor of apoptosis 1 (TRIAP1) into mitochondria, which can reduce cardiolipin levels and promote VDAC oligomerization in skeletal muscle. VDAC oligomerization, known to facilitate mtDNA release, can activate cGAS-STING/NFKB innate immune signaling and downregulate MyoD in skeletal muscle, thereby promoting the formation of oxidative slow-twitch fibers. In mice, CHCHD4 haploinsufficiency is sufficient to activate this pathway, leading to increased oxidative muscle fibers and decreased fat accumulation with aging. The identification of a specific mediator regulating muscle fiber transformation provides an opportunity to understand further the molecular underpinnings of complex metabolic conditions such as obesity and could have therapeutic implications. [Display omitted] • CHCHD4 regulation by exercise training is necessary for oxidative fiber type switching • Decreased import of TRIAP1 by CHCHD4 reduces cardiolipin and promotes VDAC oligomerization • mtDNA release activates innate immune signaling to reduce MyoD for fiber type switching • Haploinsufficiency of CHCHD4 in mice promotes oxidative muscle fibers and prevents obesity Oxidative slow-twitch muscle fibers are inversely correlated with obesity. Ma et al. show that exercise-induced downregulation of CHCHD4, a mitochondrial protein import carrier, activates NFKB via innate immune signaling pathway, which in turn inhibits MyoD with resultant increases in oxidative fiber type. Modulating this signaling pathway may prevent obesity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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