SELENON (SEPN1) protects skeletal muscle from saturated fatty acid-induced ER stress and insulin resistance

Selenoprotein N (SELENON) is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) protein whose loss of function leads to a congenital myopathy associated with insulin resistance (SEPN1-related myopathy). The exact cause of the insulin resistance in patients with SELENON loss of function is not known. Skeletal muscle is t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Redox biology 2019-06, Vol.24, p.101176-101176, Article 101176
Hauptverfasser: Varone, Ersilia, Pozzer, Diego, Di Modica, Simona, Chernorudskiy, Alexander, Nogara, Leonardo, Baraldo, Martina, Cinquanta, Mario, Fumagalli, Stefano, Villar-Quiles, Rocio Nur, De Simoni, Maria-Grazia, Blaauw, Bert, Ferreiro, Ana, Zito, Ester
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Selenoprotein N (SELENON) is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) protein whose loss of function leads to a congenital myopathy associated with insulin resistance (SEPN1-related myopathy). The exact cause of the insulin resistance in patients with SELENON loss of function is not known. Skeletal muscle is the main contributor to insulin-mediated glucose uptake, and a defect in this muscle-related mechanism triggers insulin resistance and glucose intolerance. We have studied the chain of events that connect the loss of SELENON with defects in insulin-mediated glucose uptake in muscle cells and the effects of this on muscle performance. Here, we show that saturated fatty acids are more lipotoxic in SELENON-devoid cells, and blunt the insulin-mediated glucose uptake of SELENON-devoid myotubes by increasing ER stress and mounting a maladaptive ER stress response. Furthermore, the hind limb skeletal muscles of SELENON KO mice fed a high-fat diet mirrors the features of saturated fatty acid-treated myotubes, and show signs of myopathy with a compromised force production. These findings suggest that the absence of SELENON together with a high-fat dietary regimen increases susceptibility to insulin resistance by triggering a chronic ER stress in skeletal muscle and muscle weakness. Importantly, our findings suggest that environmental cues eliciting ER stress in skeletal muscle (such as a high-fat diet) affect the pathological phenotype of SEPN1-related myopathy and can therefore contribute to the assessment of prognosis beyond simple genotype-phenotype correlations.
ISSN:2213-2317
2213-2317
DOI:10.1016/j.redox.2019.101176