1 research outputs found
Hormone replacement therapy enhances IGF-1 signaling in skeletal muscle by diminishing miR-182 and miR-223 expressions: a study on postmenopausal monozygotic twin pairs
MiRNAs are fine-tuning modifiers of skeletal muscle regulation, but knowledge of
their hormonal control is lacking. We used a co-twin case-control study design,
that is, monozygotic postmenopausal twin pairs discordant for estrogen-based
hormone replacement therapy (HRT) to explore estrogen-dependent skeletal muscle
regulation via miRNAs. MiRNA profiles were determined from vastus lateralis
muscle of nine healthy 54-62-years-old monozygotic female twin pairs discordant
for HRT (median 7 years). MCF-7 cells, human myoblast cultures and mouse muscle
experiments were used to confirm estrogen's causal role on the expression of
specific miRNAs, their target mRNAs and proteins and finally the activation of
related signaling pathway. Of the 230 miRNAs expressed at detectable levels in
muscle samples, qPCR confirmed significantly lower miR-182, miR-223 and
miR-142-3p expressions in HRT using than in their nonusing co-twins.
Insulin/IGF-1 signaling emerged one common pathway targeted by these miRNAs.
IGF-1R and FOXO3A mRNA and protein were more abundantly expressed in muscle
samples of HRT users than nonusers. In vitro assays confirmed effective targeting
of miR-182 and miR-223 on IGF-1R and FOXO3A mRNA as well as a dose-dependent
miR-182 and miR-223 down-regulations concomitantly with up-regulation of FOXO3A
and IGF-1R expression. Novel finding is the postmenopausal HRT-reduced miRs-182,
miR-223 and miR-142-3p expression in female skeletal muscle. The observed
miRNA-mediated enhancement of the target genes' IGF-1R and FOXO3A expression as
well as the activation of insulin/IGF-1 pathway signaling via phosphorylation of
AKT and mTOR is an important mechanism for positive estrogen impact on skeletal
muscle of postmenopausal women
