Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Ono Takehito
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 7000026328
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Identification of a KLF5-dependent program and drug development for skeletal muscle atrophy

Bibliography Type

Joint Author

Author

Lin Liu, Hiroyuki Koike, Takehito Ono, Shinichiro Hayashi, Fujimi Kudo, Atsushi Kaneda, Hiroyuki Kagechika, Ichiro Manabe, Tomoki Nakashima, Yumiko Oishi

Summary

Skeletal muscle atrophy is caused by various conditions, including aging, disuse related to a sedentary lifestyle and lack of physical activity, and cachexia. Our insufficient understanding of the molecular mechanism underlying muscle atrophy limits the targets for the development of effective pharmacologic treatments and preventions. Here, we identified Krüppel-like factor 5 (KLF5), a zinc-finger transcription factor, as a key mediator of the early muscle atrophy program. KLF5 was up-regulated in atrophying myotubes as an early response to dexamethasone or simulated microgravity in vitro. Skeletal muscle–selective deletion of Klf5 significantly attenuated muscle atrophy induced by mechanical unloading in mice. Transcriptome- and genome-wide chromatin accessibility analyses revealed that KLF5 regulates atrophy-related programs, including metabolic changes and E3-ubiquitin ligase-mediated proteolysis, in coordination with Foxo1. The synthetic retinoic acid receptor agonist Am80, a KLF5 inhibitor, suppressed both dexamethasone- and microgravity-induced muscle atrophy in vitro and oral Am80 ameliorated disuse– and dexamethasone-induced atrophy in mice. Moreover, in three independent sets of transcriptomic data from human skeletal muscle, KLF5 expression significantly increased with age and the presence of sarcopenia and correlated positively with the expression of the atrophy-related ubiquitin ligase genes FBXO32 and TRIM63. These findings demonstrate that KLF5 is a key transcriptional regulator mediating muscle atrophy and that pharmacological intervention with Am80 is a potentially preventive treatment.

Magazine(name)

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Volume

118

Number Of Pages

35

StartingPage

e2102895118

EndingPage

Date of Issue

2021/08

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2102895118

NAID

PMID

URL

J-GLOBAL ID

arXiv ID

ORCID Put Code

DBLP ID