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Rapamycin improves satellite cells’ autophagy and muscle regeneration during hypercapnia
Joseph Balnis, … , Harold A. Singer, Ariel Jaitovich
Joseph Balnis, … , Harold A. Singer, Ariel Jaitovich
Published November 26, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2025;10(1):e182842. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.182842.
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Research Article Pulmonology Article has an altmetric score of 1

Rapamycin improves satellite cells’ autophagy and muscle regeneration during hypercapnia

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Abstract

Both CO2 retention, or hypercapnia, and skeletal muscle dysfunction predict higher mortality in critically ill patients. Mechanistically, muscle injury and reduced myogenesis contribute to critical illness myopathy, and while hypercapnia causes muscle wasting, no research has been conducted on hypercapnia-driven dysfunctional myogenesis in vivo. Autophagy flux regulates myogenesis by supporting skeletal muscle stem cell — satellite cell — activation, and previous data suggest that hypercapnia inhibits autophagy. We tested whether hypercapnia worsens satellite cell autophagy flux and myogenic potential and if autophagy induction reverses these deficits. Satellite cell transplantation and lineage-tracing experiments showed that hypercapnia undermined satellite cells’ activation, replication, and myogenic capacity. Bulk and single-cell sequencing analyses indicated that hypercapnia disrupts autophagy, senescence, and other satellite cell programs. Autophagy activation was reduced in hypercapnic cultured myoblasts, and autophagy genetic knockdown phenocopied these changes in vitro. Rapamycin stimulation led to AMPK activation and downregulation of the mTOR pathway, which are both associated with accelerated autophagy flux and cell replication. Moreover, hypercapnic mice receiving rapamycin showed improved satellite cell autophagy flux, activation, replication rate, and posttransplantation myogenic capacity. In conclusion, we have shown that hypercapnia interferes with satellite cell activation, autophagy flux, and myogenesis, and systemic rapamycin administration improves these outcomes.

Authors

Joseph Balnis, Emily L. Jackson, Lisa A. Drake, Diane V. Singer, Ramon Bossardi Ramos, Harold A. Singer, Ariel Jaitovich

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