Histone methyltransferase MLL4 controls myofiber identity and muscle performance through MEF2 interaction

Skeletal muscle depends on the precise orchestration of contractile and metabolic gene expression programs to direct fiber-type specification and to ensure muscle performance. Exactly how such fiber type-specific patterns of gene expression are established and maintained remains unclear, however. He...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of clinical investigation 2020-09, Vol.130 (9), p.4710-4725
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Lin, Ding, Chenyun, Fu, Tingting, Feng, Zhenhua, Lee, Ji-Eun, Xiao, Liwei, Xu, Zhisheng, Yin, Yujing, Guo, Qiqi, Sun, Zongchao, Sun, Wanping, Mao, Yan, Yang, Likun, Zhou, Zheng, Zhou, Danxia, Xu, Leilei, Zhu, Zezhang, Qiu, Yong, Ge, Kai, Gan, Zhenji
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Skeletal muscle depends on the precise orchestration of contractile and metabolic gene expression programs to direct fiber-type specification and to ensure muscle performance. Exactly how such fiber type-specific patterns of gene expression are established and maintained remains unclear, however. Here, we demonstrate that histone monomethyl transferase MLL4 (KMT2D), an enhancer regulator enriched in slow myofibers, plays a critical role in controlling muscle fiber identity as well as muscle performance. Skeletal muscle-specific ablation of MLL4 in mice resulted in downregulation of the slow oxidative myofiber gene program, decreased numbers of type I myofibers, and diminished mitochondrial respiration, which caused reductions in muscle fatty acid utilization and endurance capacity during exercise. Genome-wide ChIP-Seq and mRNA-Seq analyses revealed that MLL4 directly binds to enhancers and functions as a coactivator of the myocyte enhancer factor 2 (MEF2) to activate transcription of slow oxidative myofiber genes. Importantly, we also found that the MLL4 regulatory circuit is associated with muscle fiber-type remodeling in humans. Thus, our results uncover a pivotal role for MLL4 in specifying structural and metabolic identities of myofibers that govern muscle performance. These findings provide therapeutic opportunities for enhancing muscle fitness to combat a variety of metabolic and muscular diseases.
ISSN:0021-9738
1558-8238
DOI:10.1172/JCI136155