The m6A methyltransferase METTL3 regulates muscle maintenance and growth in mice

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Abstract

Skeletal muscle serves fundamental roles in organismal health. Gene expression fluctuations are critical for muscle homeostasis and the response to environmental insults. Yet, little is known about post-transcriptional mechanisms regulating such fluctuations while impacting muscle proteome. Here we report genome-wide analysis of mRNA methyladenosine (m6A) dynamics of skeletal muscle hypertrophic growth following overload-induced stress. We show that increases in METTL3 (the m6A enzyme), and concomitantly m6A, control skeletal muscle size during hypertrophy; exogenous delivery of METTL3 induces skeletal muscle growth, even without external triggers. We also show that METTL3 represses activin type 2 A receptors (ACVR2A) synthesis, blunting activation of anti-hypertrophic signaling. Notably, myofiber-specific conditional genetic deletion of METTL3 caused spontaneous muscle wasting over time and abrogated overload-induced hypertrophy; a phenotype reverted by co-administration of a myostatin inhibitor. These studies identify a previously unrecognized post-transcriptional mechanism promoting the hypertrophic response of skeletal muscle via control of myostatin signaling.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Petrosino, J. M., Hinger, S. A., Golubeva, V. A., Barajas, J. M., Dorn, L. E., Iyer, C. C., … Accornero, F. (2022). The m6A methyltransferase METTL3 regulates muscle maintenance and growth in mice. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27848-7

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