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Intermittent glucocorticoid treatment enhances skeletal muscle performance through sexually dimorphic mechanisms
Isabella M. Salamone, … , Garima Tomar, Elizabeth M. McNally
Isabella M. Salamone, … , Garima Tomar, Elizabeth M. McNally
Published February 10, 2022
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2022;132(6):e149828. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI149828.
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Research Article Endocrinology Muscle biology

Intermittent glucocorticoid treatment enhances skeletal muscle performance through sexually dimorphic mechanisms

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Abstract

Glucocorticoid steroids are commonly prescribed for many inflammatory conditions, but chronic daily use produces adverse effects, including muscle wasting and weakness. In contrast, shorter glucocorticoid pulses may improve athletic performance, although the mechanisms remain unclear. Muscle is sexually dimorphic and comparatively little is known about how male and female muscles respond to glucocorticoids. We investigated the impact of once-weekly glucocorticoid exposure on skeletal muscle performance comparing male and female mice. One month of once-weekly glucocorticoid dosing improved muscle specific force in both males and females. Transcriptomic profiling of isolated myofibers identified a striking sexually dimorphic response to weekly glucocorticoids. Male myofibers had increased expression of genes in the IGF1/PI3K pathway and calcium handling, while female myofibers had profound upregulation of lipid metabolism genes. Muscles from weekly prednisone–treated males had improved calcium handling, while comparably treated female muscles had reduced intramuscular triglycerides. Consistent with altered lipid metabolism, weekly prednisone–treated female mice had greater endurance relative to controls. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation, we defined a sexually dimorphic chromatin landscape after weekly prednisone. These results demonstrate that weekly glucocorticoid exposure elicits distinct pathways in males versus females, resulting in enhanced performance.

Authors

Isabella M. Salamone, Mattia Quattrocelli, David Y. Barefield, Patrick G. Page, Ibrahim Tahtah, Michele Hadhazy, Garima Tomar, Elizabeth M. McNally

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Figure 10

Sex-specific GR binding patterns in skeletal muscle treated with weekly prednisone.

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Sex-specific GR binding patterns in skeletal muscle treated with weekly ...
(A) ChIP-qPCR showed low occupancy of GR at a negative control locus on chromosome 5 (desert) and high occupancy at the canonical GRE near Fkbp5 in both males and females. Putative GREs near lipid metabolism genes had increased occupancy of GR in weekly treated females compared with vehicle-treated females; males had no change in GR occupancy. (B and C) ChIP-qPCR showed increased occupancy at putative GREs near IGF1/PI3K pathway (B) and calcium-handling (C) genes in weekly treated males, while females had no change in binding with treatment. Data were analyzed with Welch’s t test (A–C).

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