The Importance of mTORC1-Autophagy Axis for Skeletal Muscle Diseases
Abstract
:1. Introduction of mTORC1
2. Regulation of Autophagy by mTORC1
2.1. Regulation of ULK1 Complex during Autophagy Initiation
2.2. Regulation of PI3KC3-Beclin 1-ATG14 Complex during Nucleation
2.3. Regulation of Autophagosome Expansion
2.4. Regulation of Autophagosome Maturation and Termination
2.5. mTORC1-Dependent RNA Metabolism
3. Roles of the mTORC1-Autophagy Pathway in Regulating Skeletal Muscle Functions
3.1. mTORC1, but Not mTORC2, Regulates Skeletal Muscle Sizes
3.2. The Roles of mTORC1-Autophagy Axis in Muscle Homeostasis
3.3. The Roles of FOXO and mTORC1 in Regulation of Muscle Autophagy
4. Roles of the mTORC1-Autophagy Pathway in Muscle Regeneration
4.1. mTORC1 in Myogenesis
4.2. Autophagy in Myogenesis
5. Potential Treatment of Muscle Diseases by Targeting mTORC1 and Autophagy
5.1. Cancer Cachexia
5.2. Sarcopenia
Disease | Intervention | Model | Main Findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cancer cachexia | Salidroside | Mice with C26 and LLC | Decreased mTORC1 in muscle | Chen et al., 2016 [97] |
C2C12 treated with TNF-⍺ | Decreased mTORC1 in myotubes | |||
Raptor KO mice | Mice with LLC and C26 | Decreased mTORC1 activity Increased autophagic flux | Geremia et al., 2022 [98] | |
IL-6 receptor Ab | ApcMin/+ mice | Decreased mTORC1 activity Increased AMPK activity | White et al., 2011 [72] | |
Aerobic exercise Rapamycin | C26-bearing mice and colon carcinoma patients | Loss of body weight Decreased autophagic flux | Pigna et al., 2016 [100] | |
Rapamycin | C2C12 cells treated with conditioned media from C26 cells | Induced myotube atrophy Blockage of autophagic flux | ||
Everolimus or Temsirolimus (Rapalog) | 20 patients with renal cell carcinoma or pancreatic neuroendocrine tumour | Decreased muscle quantity, muscle mass and skeletal muscle area. | Gyawali et al., 2016 [101] | |
Everolimus | 410 patients with advanced pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors | Loss of body weight and reduced appetite. | Yao et al., 2011 [102] | |
Everolimus with endocrine therapy, aromatase inhibitor | 724 female patients with ER-positive breast cancer | Decreased body weight and reduced appetite. | Baselga et al., 2012 [103] | |
Everolimus | 302 patients with advanced, nonfunctional, well-differentiated lung or gastrointestinal neuroendocrine tumors | Decreased appetite. | Yao et al., 2016 [104] | |
Temsirolimus | 162 patients with relapsed or refractory MCL | Hess et al., 2009 [105] | ||
Nivolumab Everolimus | 821 patients with advanced clear-cell renal-cell carcinoma | Motzer et al., 2015 [106] | ||
Sarcopenia | Rapamycin | Male mice expressing LC3-GFP | Reactivation of autophagy prevented satellite cells senescence. | Garcia-Prat et al., 2016 [80] |
Rapalog RAD001 | Old Male Sprague-Dawley rats (27 months) | Increased mTORC1 activation | Joseph et al., 2019 [110] | |
Exercise | 21-month-old Wistar rats | Increased autophagy via downregulating mTORC1 pathway. | Zeng et al., 2020 [119] | |
Calorie restriction | Middle-aged Male Sprague-Dawley rats (20 months old) | Decreased mTORC1 activity | Chen et al., 2019 [120] | |
Calorie restriction and resveratrol | Male FBN 25-month-old rats | Enhanced autophagy by inhibition of mTORC1 pathway | Dutta et al., 2014 [121] | |
Calorie restriction and dietary resveratrol | Middle age to old age mice (14 months old to 30 months old) | Both dietary interventions prevent aging process through mTORC1 | Barger et al., 2008 [122] | |
Spermidine and exercise | D-galactose-induced aging rats with skeletal muscle atrophy | Increased autophagy | Fan et al., 2017 [123] | |
Spermidine | 8-week-old specific pathogen-free male C57/BL mice | Induced muscle atrophy and enhanced autophagy in MuSCs. | Zhang et al., 2018 [124] | |
Testosterone therapy and resistance exercise | 18 aged men (Ages 65–75 years) | Improve aging muscle performance and muscle mass via mTORC1 | Gharahdaghi et al., 2019 [125] |
6. Conclusions and Future Perspectives
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Han, X.; Goh, K.Y.; Lee, W.X.; Choy, S.M.; Tang, H.-W. The Importance of mTORC1-Autophagy Axis for Skeletal Muscle Diseases. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2023, 24, 297. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24010297
Han X, Goh KY, Lee WX, Choy SM, Tang H-W. The Importance of mTORC1-Autophagy Axis for Skeletal Muscle Diseases. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2023; 24(1):297. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24010297
Chicago/Turabian StyleHan, Xujun, Kah Yong Goh, Wen Xing Lee, Sze Mun Choy, and Hong-Wen Tang. 2023. "The Importance of mTORC1-Autophagy Axis for Skeletal Muscle Diseases" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 24, no. 1: 297. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24010297
APA StyleHan, X., Goh, K. Y., Lee, W. X., Choy, S. M., & Tang, H. -W. (2023). The Importance of mTORC1-Autophagy Axis for Skeletal Muscle Diseases. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 24(1), 297. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24010297