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Abstract Number: 2218

Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) Stress-Induced Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Atrophy Can be Prevented By Pharmacological Upregulation of Heat Shock Protein 70 (HSP) in Cultured Murine Myotubes

Adam P. Lightfoot, Malcolm J. Jackson, Anne McArdle and Robert G. Cooper, Musculoskeletal Biology, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom

Meeting: 2014 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Keywords: ER Stress, heat-shock proteins, Idiopathic Inflammatory Myopathies (IIM), mitochondria and myositis

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Session Information

Title: Muscle Biology, Myositis and Myopathies: Immunological Aspects of Inflammatory Myopathy

Session Type: Abstract Submissions (ACR)

Background/Purpose: The symmetrical proximal muscle weakness typical of myositis often fails to improve completely with any treatment, due to irreversible muscle fibre degeneration. Although inflammatory cell infiltration is a primary feature of myositis, increasing evidence suggests that muscle weakness correlates poorly with the degree of infiltration (Englund et al. 2001; Li et al. 2004), and in fact may precede inflammatory cell infiltrates (Nagaraju et al. 2001). Research suggests that non-immune cell-mediated mechanisms contribute to muscle weakness, including activation of the ER stress response which is associated with muscle fibre dysfunction and damage (Nagaraju et al. 2005; Yoshida 2007). The mechanisms which mediate ER stress-induced muscle dysfunction in myositis remain unelucidated. However, studies suggest that interplay between the ER stress response, mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative damage may be involved(Yuzefovych et al. 2013; Cao et al. 2014). Targeted transgenic up-regulation of molecular chaperones, termed Heat Shock Proteins (HSPs), specifically HSP70, attenuates muscle dysfunction and oxidative damage in muscle of old rodents (McArdle et al. 2004; Broome et al. 2006). Similarly, pharmacological increases in HSP70 content of muscle using 17-N-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17AAG), provided an enhanced functional recovery of muscle following exercise-induced damage (Kayani et al. 2008). We hypothesised that, in myositis, ER stress induces mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative damage, which is a major non-immune cell mediated factor contributing to muscle weakness. We further hypothesised  that targeted pharmacological up-regulation of HSP70 could provide a therapeutic strategy to protect muscle fibres in myositis. Methods : C2C12 myoblasts were grown in standard cell culture conditions (5% CO2, 37oC) and differentiated to myotubes in growth media (DMEM) supplemented with 2% horse serum. Myotubes were treated with 1mg/ml Tunicamycin to induce ER stress, in the prescence and abscence of 17AAG (0.1mg/ml) for a period of 24 hours. Cells were harvested and oxygen consumption assessed using a clark electrode (Hansatech Instruments), in the presence of electron transport chain (ETC) substrates and inhibitors: Succintate/Rotenone and Glutamate/Malate to determine the respiratory control ratio (RCR) and Phosphate/Oxygen (P:O) ratio. ATP generation was quantified using bioluminescence assay (Roche). Specific ER stress markers were measured using SDS-PAGE/western blotting and qPCR. Myotube morphology changes were assessed using light microscopy. Results :  Activation of the ER stress response in C2C12 myotubes resulted in mitochondrial dysfunction, evidenced by declines in RCR, P:O ratio and in ATP generation. Cells treated with Tunicamycin in the presence of 17AAG showed full preservation of mitochondrial function and ATP generation. ER stress-induced atrophy of C2C12 myotubes was prevented by the presence of 17AAG. Conclusion : Data demonstrate that pharmacological up-regulation of HSP70 provides protection against ER stress-induced mitochondrial dysfunction and atrophy in C2C12 myotubes.


Disclosure:

A. P. Lightfoot,
None;

M. J. Jackson,
None;

A. McArdle,
None;

R. G. Cooper,
None.

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ACR Meeting Abstracts - https://acrabstracts.org/abstract/endoplasmic-reticulum-er-stress-induced-mitochondrial-dysfunction-and-atrophy-can-be-prevented-by-pharmacological-upregulation-of-heat-shock-protein-70-hsp-in-cultured-murine-myotubes/

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