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"How do muscles adapt to exercise?" is one of the key questions in sports
science. Here, we aim to give an update on the answer to this question,
which is work in rapid progress. There are barriers for sports scientists
to this research because it is cellular and molecular biology and we therefore
recommend introductory reading on DNA, genes, promoters, enhancers, transcription
factors, transcription, translation and gene regulation in order to fully
appreciate this review.
Classical research
on skeletal muscle adaptation to exercise
Skeletal muscle adapts specifically to chronic exercise or inactivity
with well-known changes in protein isoforms and quantities (Saltin and
Gollnick, 1983). In
their seminal cross-reinnervation experiment, (Buller et al., 1960)
demonstrated that the contraction properties of a slow muscle changed
from slow to fast after reinnervation by a nerve that normally innervated
a fast muscle. Numerous studies since that time have demonstrated the
ability of terminally differentiated muscle fibres to adapt to a change
in contractile activity. Reduced activity levels as a result of unloading,
spaceflight, immobilisation or paraplegia cause atrophy and a shift in
gene expression towards a faster, glycolytic skeletal muscle phenotype
(Booth and Gollnick, 1983;
Talmadge et al., 1995).
Increased activity causes specific skeletal muscle adaptation depending
on the force, speed and duration characteristics of the contraction pattern.
Key adaptations to chronic low-frequency electrical stimulation of fast
muscle include an upregulation of mitochondrial biogenesis, oxidative
enzymes, fat metabolism enzymes and slow MHC isoforms and a downregulation
of glycolytic enzymes and fast MHC isoforms (Chi et al., 1986;
Henriksson et al., 1986;
Brown et al., 1985;
Pette and Vrbova, 1999).
Endurance training, a moderate physiological version of chronic stimulation,
causes less dramatic changes in a similar direction (Holloszy and Coyle,
1984; Salmons and
Henriksson, 1981;
Saltin and Gollnick, 1983).
In contrast, high force and speed contraction patterns cause muscle hypertrophy
predominantly via an increase in the fast twitch fibre area (Tesch, 1988).
However, adaptations to strength and power training appear to be bi-directional
because type I and the very fast IIX (or IIB) MHCs change towards the
intermediate IIA isoform (Andersen et al., 1994;
Allemeier et al., 1994).
Finally, some skeletal muscle fibres will suffer apoptosis (Podhorska-Okolow
et al., 1998) or necrosis
(Hikida et al., 1983)
as a result of high-impact exercise.
Overview over exercise-induced signal transduction and gene regulation
The vast majority of the classical skeletal muscle adaptation research
has been descriptive and did not explain the signalling processes that
link contraction patterns to specific gene regulation events and adaptation.
The increasing adoption of cellular and molecular techniques by researchers
interested in sport and exercise are the main reason for a rapid progress
in uncovering the signal transduction events that regulate skeletal muscle
adaptation to exercise. A general, schematical overview of exercise-induced
signal transduction and gene regulation is shown in figure
1.
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Signal transduction is used to describe the transfer of signals and stresses
from the outside or inside of the cell usually by kinase or phosphatase
cascades or other signalling processes to cytosolic or nuclear targets.
These targets either change cellular processes such as energy metabolism
or regulate genes, which results in a changed muscle phenotype. In the
following paragraphs, we discuss the role of the calcineurin and MAPK
pathways in the exercise response in detail and briefly the role of other
contraction-responsive signal transduction pathways.
Calcineurin pathway: Signalling via calcium, dephosphorylation and
nuclear translocation
Chin et al. (1998)
were the first to identify a signal transduction pathway that could link
the increased calcium levels during endurance exercise to the fast-to-slow
muscle fibre phenotype changes that occur as a result of exercise. They
used cyclosporine A to block the calcium-responsive calcineurin signal
transduction pathway. This intervention resulted in an increase in fast
muscle fibres in mouse skeletal muscle in vivo suggesting that the activated
calcineurin pathway could be responsible for the well characterised fast-to-slow
change in fibre phenotype that results from chronic exercise. The authors
hypothesized that the calcineurin pathway would be "a molecular mechanism
by which different patterns of motor activity promote selective changes
in gene expression to establish the specialized characteristics of slow
and fast myofibres" (Chin et al., 1998).
Calcineurin is a protein phosphatase that is activated by increased intracellular
free calcium levels. Activated calcineurin dephosphorylates the transcription
factor NFAT and this dephosphorylation reveals the nuclear localization
sequence of NFAT. Increased levels of free calcium are therefore a pivotal
step in bringing about the nuclear translocation of NFAT (Meissner et
al., 2001). Nuclear
NFAT binds DNA at NFAT enhancer sequences found in the regulatory regions
of a number of "slow" skeletal muscle genes (Chin et al., 1998).
However, it was subsequently shown that the calcineurin pathway could
increase the expression of some fast genes as well (Swoap et al., 2000)
which contradicts Chin et al.'s hypothesis. In addition, there is evidence
that the calcineurin pathway is involved s keletal muscle hypertrophy
induced by the growth factor IGF-1 (Semsarian et al., 1999)
which is not in line with the assumption that the calcineurin pathway
mediates fast-to-slow transformations. To conclude, the calcineurin pathway
appears to play a role in adaptation to exercise but further studies are
needed to clarify its true function in vivo.
MAPK pathways: Signalling via kinase cascades and nuclear translocation
MAPK signal transduction pathways are well known from research on different
organisms, tissues and pathologies. MAPK pathways are kinase cascades
that use protein phosphorylation as their signalling mechanism. The three
main MAPK pathways, ERK1/2, p38 (Yu et al., 2001;
Boppart et al., 2000)
and JNK (Aronson et al., 1998)
have been shown to be activated by various forms of contraction (Widegren
et al., 2000) suggesting
that they might regulate some of the skeletal muscle genes that change
their expression rate as a response to exercise. Concrete evidence for
a role of the ERK1/2 signal transduction pathway in exercise adaptation
can be found in the study by Murgia et al. (2000).
The authors demonstrated an increased slow fibre percentage during injury-repair
in vivo when the ERK1/2 pathway was activated by transfection (Murgia
et al., 2000). In
addition, we (Higginson et al., 2002)
found that a pharmacological blockade of the ERK1/2 pathway with the MEK1/2
inhibitor U0126 caused an upregulation in the fast MHC IIB and IIX isoforms
and down-regulation of the slow MHC I (ß) isoform in primary skeletal
muscle cell culture (figure 2).
These observations support the hypothesis that exercise-activation of
the ERK1/2 signal transduction pathway pathway may promote a fast-to-slow
change in skeletal muscle. However, activities of metabolic enzymes did
not change as expected in our study, suggesting that the ERK1/2 pathway
is not responsible for all adaptations to endurance exercise.
The research on the calcineurin and MAPK pathways suggests that contraction-responsive
signal transduction pathways are either redundant or do only regulate
a part of the adaptation response and that adaptation signalling is likely
to involve more than one signal transduction pathway.
Brief overview over other contraction-responsive signal transduction
pathways
There are now several other examples for signal transduction pathways
that are both contraction-responsive and regulate genes as a response
to exercise or inactivity. We briefly discuss some of these pathways and
their cross-talk in order to develop our argument that adaptation signalling
is likely to involve a network of signal transduction pathways capable
of integrating numerous signals and stresses associated with exercise.
Exercise has been shown to activate the signal transduction kinase PKC
in rat skeletal muscle (Richter et al., 1987;
Cleland et al., 1989).
However, it seems unlikely that calcium is the stimulus because the major
PKC isoform in skeletal muscle is PKC
which lacks a calcium binding motif (Osada et al., 1992;
Donnelly et al., 1994).
PKC signalling has been shown to regulate skeletal muscle fibre phenotype
in avian muscle (DiMario, 2001)
but it is unclear whether it has a similar role in mammalian muscle. The
transcription factor NF- B is
activated by contraction in rat skeletal muscle (Hollander et al., 2001)
and is involved in myogenesis (Lehtinen et al., 1996;Canicio
et al., 2001). The
growth factor IGF-II has been found to activate NF- B
and effect myogenesis (Kaliman et al., 1999).
Other studies demonstrated that NF- B
mediates the protein loss induced by TNF
in skeletal muscle myotubes (Li and Reid, 2000).
Moreover, a NF- B DNA regulatory
element has been found in the myostatin gene suggesting that NF- B
is involved in the regulation of skeletal muscle growth (Ma et al., 2001).
The calcium-dependent signal transduction kinase CaMK is believed to be
activated by exercise in skeletal muscle (Wu et al., 2002)
and it is involved in the regulation of the transcription factor MEF2
(Wu et al., 2000).
Constitutively activated CaMK in transgenic mice increases mitochondrial
biogenesis and increases the percentage of muscle fibres with a slow phenotype
in vivo (Wu et al., 2002)
suggesting a key role of the CaMK pathway in fast-to-slow fibre phenotype
changes. The signal transduction kinase AMPK is activated by AMP and inhibited
by phosphocreatine and therefore sensitive to the energy status of the
muscle fibre (Winder, 2001).
It plays a role in glucose import and there is evidence for a role in
activating mitochondrial biogenesis (Bergeron et al., 2001).
The PI 3-kinase/AKT/mTOR signal transduction pathway pathway has been
shown to be essential for inducing skeletal muscle hypertrophy (Rommel
et al., 2001). Integrins
are receptor proteins that bind and respond to the extracellular matrix
and have been identified as possible inducers of hypertrophy signalling
in response to mechanical stresses (Carson and Wei, 2000).
This brief overview shows that numerous signal transduction pathways participate
in the exercise response.
Evidence for cross-talk
There is now abundant evidence for connections between signal transduction
pathways. A signal transduction between two distinct signal transduction
pathways is termed cross-talk and limited evidence exists for cross-talk
in skeletal muscle signal transduction. For example, there is cross-talk
between the signal transduction kinase MEK1 and the developmental transcription
factor MyoD (Perry et al., 2001).
There is also evidence for cross-talk between the insulin and p38 MAPK
signal transduction pathways (Blair et al., 1999)
and in the development of insulin resistance in skeletal muscle cells
(Storz et al., 1999).
There is only a limited number of examples for cross-talk in skeletal
muscle but if skeletal muscle signalling was comparable to the signalling
in the functionally related and better researched heart, then numerous
examples for cross-talk could be expected (Molkentin and Dorn II, 2001).
Based on this research, we suggest that adaptation signalling is likely
to be mediated by an interlinked network of several contraction-responsive
signal transduction pathways.
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Figure 1.
An overview of exercise-induced adaptation signalling and gene regulation
in skeletal muscle.


Figure 2.
Relative amounts of myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform IIx (a) and IIb (b)
mRNA (mean ± SEM, n=4) in cultured rat myocytes (muscle cells) measured
with Northern blotting (Higginson et al., 2002).
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Signal transduction pathways are capable of regulating non-genomic changes
such as glucose import and of regulating transcription or translation,
which results in changed protein concentrations or isoforms. Here, we
discuss the transcription factor MEF2 as an example for the complex regulation
of transcription factors. We then review the regulation of the myosin
heavy chain gene family, mitochondrial biogenesis and the activation of
satellite cells to show the diversity of responses to signal transduction
processes.
MEF2: Double function as transcription and co-factor that is regulated
by several pathways in development and as a response to exercise
MEF2 is a transcription factor which has four different isoforms termed
MEF2A-D. Active MEF2 binds to a CTA(A/T)4TAG regulatory DNA
sequence and it has been shown to be involved in the regulation of the
majority of genes expressed in skeletal muscle including creatine kinase,
myoglobin and GLUT4 (Yang et al., 1998;
McKinsey et al., 2002).
Here, we discuss the example of MEF2 to show that transcription factors
can be regulated by a number of diverse mechanisms and pathways. On function
of MEF2 is its role as an essential co-regulator of muscle development
or myogenesis via interaction with the developmental MRFs (Molkentin et
al., 1995; Black and
Olson, 1998). Myogenesis
is primarily regulated by the four MRFs called MyoD, Myf-5, myogenin and
MRF4, which are transcription factors that promote the development towards
mature skeletal muscle fibres (Buckingham, 2001;
Arnold & Winter, 1998).
The distance between the MRF and MEF2 DNA binding sites is constant suggesting
that this is a requirement for an interaction between both factors (Fickett,
1996). Because MRF
mRNA and protein levels chance as a response to denervation and electrical
stimulation (Hu et al., 1997;
Walters et al., 2000;
Jacobs-El et al., 1995;
Voytik et al., 1993)
and because MEF2 is activated by various exercise-responsive pathways
as will be discussed below, the combination of changed MRFs levels and
activated MEF2 is probably important for the adaptation to exercise. However,
the role of MRFs in adaptation to exercise is unclear. For example, denervation
causes an increase in myogenin expression (Voytik et al., 1993
and Walters et al., 2000)
while low-frequency stimulation and static stretch does cause no changes
in myogenin expression (Jacobs-El et al., 1995).
An overexpression of myogenin, however, results in increased activities
of oxidative enzymes and decreased activities of glycolytic enzymes (Hughes
et al., 1999) which
is opposite to what would be expected.
MEF2 itself is activated by calcium and possibly other signals inside
the exercising skeletal muscle (Wu et al., 2001).
It is dephosphorylated by calcineurin (Wu et al., 2000;
Wu et al., 2001) and
phosphorylated by CaMK (McKinsey et al., 2002)
and the p38 MAPK (Yang et al., 1998;
Zetser et al., 1999;
Black and Olson, 1998).
There is some evidence that the energy-status sensitive AMPK signal transduction
kinase might increase MEF2 DNA binding (Zheng et al., 2001).
CaMK, however, also signals via a second, unique mechanism to MEF2 that
involves histone deacetylases. Histone deacetylases deacetylate tails
on histones which results in tighter packing of the DNA so that the DNA
is not accessible (McKinsey et al., 2002).
Histone deacetylases also bind to MEF2 and inhibit gene expression (McKinsey
et al., 2001). Activated
CaMK phosphorylates histone deacetylases resulting in detachment from
MEF2 and the histone deacetylases are also transported out of the nucleus
(McKinsey et al., 2000;
McKinsey et al., 2002).
Antagonist histone acetylases do then acetylate the histone tails and
the DNA becomes more accessible (McKinsey et al., 2001).
The MEF2 example highlights that transcription factors can be activated
by several signal transduction pathways.
Myosin heavy chain isoform regulation: Genetic location related to
function and numerous regulatory elements
The isoforms of the contractile MHC proteins are key determinants of the
contraction characteristics of skeletal muscle fibres. Fibre types are
usually named after the MHC isoform that is predominantly expressed inside
a fibre. In humans, the "slow" MHC
is found in heart and the ß/I MHC isoform is found in heart and
slow skeletal muscle fibres. The genes for both isoforms are located at
21.3 Mb on chromosome 14 (human genome data search in www.ensembl.org).
In contrast, the developmental and fast MHC isoforms, namely perinatal,
embryonal, IIa, IId/x, IIb and extraocular, are situated in a narrow region
around 11.8 and 12.0 Mb on chromosome 17 (human genome data search in
www.ensembl.org; Weiss et al., 1999).
Such clustering of related genes occurs in some globin, homeobox, T cell
receptor genes. In contrast, other contractile proteins with different
isoforms such as myosin light chains, actin and troponin I and genes of
enzyme isoforms such as creatine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase are not
clustered (human genome data search in www.ensembl.org; Weiss et al.,
1999). The clustering
of the MHC heavy chain isoform genes opens the possibility that these
MHC gene clusters are controlled by locus control regions or epigenetic
mechanisms (Weiss et al., 1999).
If this is the case, the cluster would be highly accessible and capable
of recruiting chromatin-modifying, coactivator and transcription complexes
as has been discussed for the globin isoform gene cluster (Levings and
Bungert, 2002). It
is an interesting hypothesis that the calcium-CaMK-dependent export of
HDAC which might result in increased histone acetylation might open "slow"
DNA regions, so that transcription could take place (McKinsey et al.,
2000). In addition,
each MHC isoform gene has multiple enhancers that are regulated by the
binding of transcription factors. In mice, the promoter regions of the
fast MHC IIa, IId and IIb genes include enhancers for NFAT, E-boxes, TATA
boxes, AT-rich and CarG regions, often with more than one copy (Allen
et al., 2001). Transcription
factors will bind to these enhancers and increase the transcription of
the gene. It has been shown that the developmental transcription factors
MyoD or myf-5 preferentially activate the fast MHC IIb isoform gene while
calcineurin preferentially activates the intermediate MHC IIa isoform
gene in vitro (Allen et al., 2001).
In addition, we found that an ERK1/2 pathway blockade caused significant
upregulation of the MHC IIa and IIb isoforms (see Figure
2; Higginson et al., 2002).
Mitochondrial biogenensis: Co-ordination of nuclear and mitochondrial
gene expression
One key adaptation to endurance exercise is an increase in oxidative capacity.
The skeletal muscle contribution to this change is a higher mitochondrial
content as a result of increased mitochondrial biogenensis (Holloszy and
Coyle, 1984). Mitochondrial
biogenesis involves the parallel expression of genes that are encoded
in the nuclear and mitochondrial DNA. In addition, the mitochondrial DNA
needs to be replicated so that each new mitochondrion has its own DNA
copies. Exercise-induced mitochondrial biogenesis can be described as
a four-step process: (1) The initial step involves the activation of signal
transduction pathways by exercise and the activation or expression of
transcription factors that regulate the expression of genes encoding mitochondrial
proteins. Both the AMPK and CaMK signal transduction pathways are believed
to be contraction-responsive and have been shown to regulate the expression
of mitochondrial transcription factors and increase mitochondrial biogenesis.
AMPK is activated by AMP and inhibited by phosphocreatine (Winder and
Hardie, 1996). Activated
AMPK is likely to be responsible for increases in NRF-1, cytochrome c
and mitochondrial density, suggesting that AMPK activates mitochondrial
biogenesis when cellular energy metabolism is stressed (Bergeron et al.,
2001). In addition,
transgenic mice with constitutively active CaMK IV showed increased mitochondrial
DNA replication and mitochondrial biogenesis (Wu et al., 2002).
Constitutively active CaMK IV also increased the expression of the coactivator
PGC-1 which is a key mediator of mitochondrial biogenensis (Wu et al.,
2002). However, the
CaMK IV isoform is not normally expressed in skeletal muscle (Means et
al., 1997) and therefore,
these results have to be interpreted with care. Two other studies show
that PGC-1 is upregulated as a result of exercise and that pharmacological
activation of AMPK does increase PGC-1 expression as well (Goto et al.,
2000; Terada et al.,
2002) suggesting that
PGC-1 can be activated by more than one contraction-responsive signal
transduction pathway. Finally, overexpression of the transcription factor
PGC-1 upregulates not only mitochondrial genes but also extramitochondrial
genes such as myoglobin and slow troponin (Lin et al., 2002)
indicating a wider role for PGC-1 in the adaptation to endurance exercise.
(2) In the second step, genes for mitochondrial proteins encoded in nuclear
DNA need to be expressed. Specific transcription factors activate the
expression of mitochondrial proteins encoded in the nucleus. Examples
for these transcription factors are NRF-1, NRF-2 (Scarpulla, 1997)
which are both induced by PGC-1 (Wu et al., 1999)
and other transcription factors such as c-jun, c-fos and the ubiquitous
Sp1 (Hood et al., 2000).
(3) Thereafter, the genes in the mitochondrial DNA need to be expressed
and the mitochondrial DNA needs to be replicated. It has been shown that
the mitochondrial transcription factor TFAM is capable of activating mitochondrial
DNA replication and expression (Parisi and Clayton, 1991).
TFAM expression increases as a response to chronic exercise, suggesting
that TFAM is indeed involved in activation of mitochondrial biogenensis
as a result of endurance exercise (Gordon et al., 2001).
TFAM knock-out mouse embryos die because of a complete absence of oxidative
phosphorylation and a severe depletion of mitochondrial DNA, highlighting
the essential role of TFAM in mitochondrial DNA replication (Larsson et
al., 1998). In addition,
the mitochondrial transcription factors TFB1M and TFB2M have recently
been shown to be necessary for transcription of mammalian mitochondrial
DNA and they interact with the mitochondrial RNA polymerase (Falkenberg
et al., 2002) (4)
Finally, mitochondrial proteins encoded in the nucleus need to be imported
into the nascent mitochondria and protein complexes that sometimes consist
of mitochondrion-encoded and nucleus-encoded proteins need to be assembled
(Poyton and McEwen, 1996).
These four steps are necessary for the increase in mitochondrial density
that is a well-known result of chronic endurance exercise.
Satellite cell activation: Key role in skeletal muscle injury repair
and hypertrophy
Skeletal muscle fibres are very large cells with hundreds of nuclei that
are derived through fusion of mononucleated, myogenic cells during muscle
development which is also called myogenesis. The nuclei in mature skeletal
muscle fibres are unable to replicate and therefore, nuclei and DNA content
would be "diluted" in hypertrophying fibres if there was no mechanism
to increase the number of nuclei parallel to the growth of the fibre.
There is, however, an alternative mechanism that is able to increase the
number of nuclei in skeletal muscle fibres during injury repair or hypertrophy.
This mechanism involves mononucleated muscle stem cells termed satellite
cells by Mauro (1961).
Satellite cells can be found under the basement membrane of muscle fibres.
Satellite cells are usually dormant but they start to proliferate and
donate their nuclei to existing muscle fibres in a response to growth
factors such as FGF and IGF-1 (Bischoff, 1994).
Satellite cells are likely to be pre-differentiated towards the fibre
phenotype of the fibre because satellite cells derived from predominantly
fast and slow avian and mouse skeletal muscle do exhibit fast and slow
features when cultured in vitro (Feldman and Stockdale, 1991;
Rosenblatt et al., 1996).
Satellite cell proliferation is essential for skeletal muscle hypertrophy
because muscle hypertrophy does not occur if satellite cells are sterilized
by irradiation (Rosenblatt et al., 1994).
It is likely that the negative skeletal muscle growth factor myostatin
plays an important role in the regulation of satellite cell proliferation
(Thomas et al., 2000).
Myostatin knock-out mice show pronounced skeletal muscle hypertrophy and
hyperplasia (McPherron et al., 1997).
Myostatin does respond to changes in contractile activity as shown by
studies demonstrating a myostatin increase in human muscle atrophy (Reardon
et al., 2001) and
downregulation in regenerating muscle fibres (Kirk et al., 2000;
Mendler et al., 2000).
Myostatin prevents myoblast proliferation (Thomas et al., 2000)
and it is therefore an attractive hypothesis that hypertrophy training
causes a decrease in myostatin expression which in turn relieves the myostatin
breaking/inhibitory effect on satellite cell proliferation. The regulatory
DNA regions in the vicinity of the myostatin gene include enhancers and
silencers responsive to glucocorticoid, androgen and thyroid hormones,
myogenic differentiation factor 1, MEF2 2, peroxisome proliferator-activated
receptor and NF- B (Ma et al.,
2001). This suggests
that several known skeletal muscle growth pathways regulate atrophy/hypertrophy
via controlling the expression of myostatin. It has been argued that satellite
cells are also involved in adaptation to endurance exercise (Yan, 2000)
especially if apoptosis (Podhorska-Okolow et al., 1998)
or necrosis occur (Hikida et al., 1983)
as a result of the exercise and injury repair is necessary. In addition,
bupivacaine hydrochloride induced muscle injury and chronic electrical
stimulation cause a greater fast-to-slow fibre type change than chronic
electrical stimulation alone (Takahashi et al.,
1993). An explanation for this finding might be that the increased
involvement of satellite cells may accelerate adaptation because new nuclei
donated by fused satellite cells are increasingly expressing a different
set of genes. Finally, bone-marrow derived cells are also capable of donating
nuclei during muscle fibre repair (Ferrari et al., 1998)
indicating that non-muscle adult stem cells can transdifferentiate into
skeletal muscle and contribute to its regeneration.
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