1 research outputs found
Ion Current-Based Proteomic Profiling for Understanding the Inhibitory Effect of Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha on Myogenic Differentiation
Despite a demonstrated role for TNF-α
in promoting muscle
wasting and cachexia, the associated molecular mechanisms and signaling
pathways of myoblast differentiation dysregulated by TNF-α remain
poorly understood. This study presents well-controlled proteomic profiling
as a means to investigate the mechanisms of TNF-α-regulated
myogenic differentiation. Primary human muscle precursor cells (MPCs)
cultured in growth medium (GM), differentiation medium (DM) to induce
myogenic differentiation, and DM with 20 ng/mL of TNF-α (<i>n</i> = 5/group) were comparatively analyzed by an ion current-based
quantitative platform consisting of reproducible sample preparation/on-pellet
digestion, a long-column nano-LC separation, and ion current-based
differential analysis. The inhibition of myogenic differentiation
by TNF-α was confirmed by reduced formation of multinucleated
myotubes and the recovered expression of altered myogenic proteins
such as MYOD and myogenin during myogenic differentiation. Functional
analysis and validation by immunoassay analysis suggested that the
cooperation of NF-κB and STAT proteins is responsible for dysregulated
differentiation in MPCs by TNF-α treatment. Increased MHC class
I components such as HLA-A, HLA-B, HLA-C, and beta-2-microglobulin
were also observed in cultures in DM treated with TNF-α. Interestingly,
inhibition of the cholesterol biosynthesis pathway during myogenic
differentiation induced by serum starvation was not recovered by TNF-α
treatment, which combined with previous reports, implies that this
process may be an early event of myogenesis. This finding could lay
the foundation for the potential use of statins in modulating myogenesis
through cholesterol, for example, in stem cell-based myocardial infarction
treatment, where differentiation of myoblasts and stem cells into
force-generating mature muscle cells is a key step to the therapeutic
capacity. In conclusion, the landscapes of altered transcription regulators,
metabolic processes, and signaling pathways in MPCs are revealed in
the regulation of myogenic differentiation by TNF-α, which is
valuable for myogenic cellular therapeutics