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AXIN1 knockout does not alter AMPK/mTORC1 regulation and glucose metabolism in mouse skeletal muscle

Authors :
Thomas E. Jensen
Zhencheng Li
Fabien Le Grand
Anika Offergeld
Jonas R. Knudsen
Jørgen F. P. Wojtaszewski
Peter Schjerling
Carlos Henríquez-Olguín
Jingwen Li
Kaspar W. Persson
Ylva Hellsten
William Jarassier
Jesper B. Birk
Source :
The Journal of Physiology. 599:3081-3100
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Key points Tamoxifen-inducible skeletal muscle-specific AXIN1 knockout (AXIN1 imKO) in mouse does not affect whole-body energy substrate metabolism. AXIN1 imKO does not affect AICAR or insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in adult skeletal muscle AXIN1 imKO does not affect adult skeletal muscle AMPK or mTORC1 signaling during AICAR/insulin/amino acid incubation, contraction and exercise. During exercise, α2/β2/γ3AMPK and AMP/ATP ratio show greater increases in AXIN1 imKO than wild-type in gastrocnemius muscle. Abstract AXIN1 is a scaffold protein known to interact with >20 proteins in signal transduction pathways regulating cellular development and function. Recently, AXIN1 was proposed to assemble a protein complex essential to catabolic-anabolic transition by coordinating AMPK activation and inactivation of mTORC1 and to regulate glucose uptake-stimulation by both AMPK and insulin. To investigate whether AXIN1 is permissive for adult skeletal muscle function, a phenotypic in vivo and ex vivo characterization of tamoxifen-inducible skeletal muscle-specific AXIN1 knockout (AXIN1 imKO) mice was conducted. AXIN1 imKO did not influence AMPK/mTORC1 signaling or glucose uptake stimulation, neither at rest nor in response to different exercise/contraction protocols, pharmacological AMPK activation, insulin or amino acids stimulation. The only genotypic difference observed was in exercising gastrocnemius muscle, where AXIN1 imKO displayed elevated α2/β2/γ3 AMPK activity and AMP/ATP ratio compared to wild-type mice. Our work shows that AXIN1 imKO generally does not affect skeletal muscle AMPK/mTORC1 signaling and glucose metabolism, likely due to functional redundancy of its homolog AXIN2. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
14697793 and 00223751
Volume :
599
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9aac2cfefe5762dd58dc6443c7ef047b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1113/jp281187