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Human Skeletal Muscle Possesses an Epigenetic Memory of Hypertrophy

Title: Human Skeletal Muscle Possesses an Epigenetic Memory of Hypertrophy
Authors: Seaborne, RA; Strauss, JA; Cocks, MS; Shepherd, SO; O'Brien, TD; van Someren, KA; Bell, PG; Murgatroyd, C; Morton, JP; Stewart, CE; Sharples, AP
Publisher Information: Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year: 2018
Collection: Liverpool John Moores University: LJMU Research Online
Subject Terms: QM Human anatomy
Description: It is unknown if adult human skeletal muscle has an epigenetic memory of earlier encounters with growth. We report, for the first time in humans, genome-wide DNA methylation (850,000 CpGs) and gene expression analysis after muscle hypertrophy (loading), return of muscle mass to baseline (unloading), followed by later hypertrophy (reloading). We discovered increased frequency of hypomethylation across the genome after reloading (18,816 CpGs) versus earlier loading (9,153 CpG sites). We also identified AXIN1, GRIK2, CAMK4, TRAF1 as hypomethylated genes with enhanced expression after loading that maintained their hypomethylated status even during unloading where muscle mass returned to control levels, indicating a memory of these genes methylation signatures following earlier hypertrophy. Further, UBR5, RPL35a, HEG1, PLA2G16, SETD3 displayed hypomethylation and enhanced gene expression following loading, and demonstrated the largest increases in hypomethylation, gene expression and muscle mass after later reloading, indicating an epigenetic memory in these genes. Finally, genes; GRIK2, TRAF1, BICC1, STAG1 were epigenetically sensitive to acute exercise demonstrating hypomethylation after a single bout of resistance exercise that was maintained 22 weeks later with the largest increase in gene expression and muscle mass after reloading. Overall, we identify an important epigenetic role for a number of largely unstudied genes in muscle hypertrophy/memory.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: text
Language: English
ISSN: 2045-2322
Relation: https://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/7912/1/Human%20epigenetic%20memory_Sharples_s41598-018-20287-3.pdf; Seaborne, RA, Strauss, JA, Cocks, MS, Shepherd, SO, O'Brien, TD, van Someren, KA, Bell, PG, Murgatroyd, C, Morton, JP, Stewart, CE and Sharples, AP (2018) Human Skeletal Muscle Possesses an Epigenetic Memory of Hypertrophy. Scientific Reports, 8. ISSN 2045-2322
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-20287-3
Availability: https://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/id/eprint/7912/; https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-20287-3
Rights: cc_by
Accession Number: edsbas.54858140
Database: BASE