Single-nucleus profiling unveils a geroprotective role of the FOXO3 in primate skeletal muscle aging

Ying Jing(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yuesheng Zuo(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yang Yu(Peking University), Liang Sun(Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College), Zhengrong Yu(Peking University), Shuai Ma(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qian Zhao(Capital Medical University), Guoqiang Sun(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Huifang Hu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jingyi Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Daoyuan Huang(Capital Medical University), Lixiao Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jiaming Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zijuan Xin(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Haoyan Huang(Capital Medical University), Juan Carlos Izpisúa Belmonte(Salk Institute for Biological Studies), Weiqi Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Si Wang(Capital Medical University), Jing Qu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Guang‐Hui Liu(Capital Medical University)
Protein & Cell
November 22, 2022
Cited by 54Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Age-dependent loss of skeletal muscle mass and function is a feature of sarcopenia, and increases the risk of many aging-related metabolic diseases. Here, we report phenotypic and single-nucleus transcriptomic analyses of non-human primate skeletal muscle aging. A higher transcriptional fluctuation was observed in myonuclei relative to other interstitial cell types, indicating a higher susceptibility of skeletal muscle fiber to aging. We found a downregulation of FOXO3 in aged primate skeletal muscle, and identified FOXO3 as a hub transcription factor maintaining skeletal muscle homeostasis. Through the establishment of a complementary experimental pipeline based on a human pluripotent stem cell-derived myotube model, we revealed that silence of FOXO3 accelerates human myotube senescence, whereas genetic activation of endogenous FOXO3 alleviates human myotube aging. Altogether, based on a combination of monkey skeletal muscle and human myotube aging research models, we unraveled the pivotal role of the FOXO3 in safeguarding primate skeletal muscle from aging, providing a comprehensive resource for the development of clinical diagnosis and targeted therapeutic interventions against human skeletal muscle aging and the onset of sarcopenia along with aging-related disorders.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis