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Phosphoproteomics of three exercise modalities identifies canonical signaling and C18ORF25 as an AMPK substrate regulating skeletal muscle function

Authors :
Ronnie Blazev
Christian S. Carl
Yaan-Kit Ng
Jeffrey Molendijk
Christian T. Voldstedlund
Yuanyuan Zhao
Di Xiao
Andrew J. Kueh
Paula M. Miotto
Vanessa R. Haynes
Justin P. Hardee
Jin D. Chung
James W. McNamara
Hongwei Qian
Paul Gregorevic
Jonathan S. Oakhill
Marco J. Herold
Thomas E. Jensen
Leszek Lisowski
Gordon S. Lynch
Garron T. Dodd
Matthew J. Watt
Pengyi Yang
Bente Kiens
Erik A. Richter
Benjamin L. Parker
Source :
Cell Metabolism. 34:1561-1577.e9
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Exercise induces signaling networks to improve muscle function and confer health benefits. To identify divergent and common signaling networks during and after different exercise modalities, we performed a phosphoproteomic analysis of human skeletal muscle from a cross-over intervention of endurance, sprint, and resistance exercise. This identified 5,486 phosphosites regulated during or after at least one type of exercise modality and only 420 core phosphosites common to all exercise. One of these core phosphosites was S67 on the uncharacterized protein C18ORF25, which we validated as an AMPK substrate. Mice lacking C18ORF25 have reduced skeletal muscle fiber size, exercise capacity, and muscle contractile function, and this was associated with reduced phosphorylation of contractile and Casup2+/suphandling proteins. Expression of C18ORF25 S66/67D phospho-mimetic reversed the decreased muscle force production. This work defines the divergent and canonical exercise phosphoproteome across different modalities and identifies C18ORF25 as a regulator of exercise signaling and muscle function.

Details

ISSN :
15504131
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dea6f7f41fb55c576c3666dbb1230ccc