TY - JOUR
T1 - Exercise-induced BCL2-regulated autophagy is required for muscle glucose homeostasis
AU - He, Congcong
AU - Bassik, Michael C.
AU - Moresi, Viviana
AU - Sun, Kai
AU - Wei, Yongjie
AU - Zou, Zhongju
AU - An, Zhenyi
AU - Loh, Joy
AU - Fisher, Jill
AU - Sun, Qihua
AU - Korsmeyer, Stanley
AU - Packer, Milton
AU - May, Herman I.
AU - Hill, Joseph A.
AU - Virgin, Herbert W.
AU - Gilpin, Christopher
AU - Xiao, Guanghua
AU - Bassel-Duby, Rhonda
AU - Scherer, Philipp E.
AU - Levine, Beth
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements We thank the UT Southwestern Mouse Metabolic Phenotyping Core and E. Berglund for assistance with metabolic measurements, J. Shelton for assistance with muscle stains, N. Mizushima for critical reagents, and B. D. Levine for expert advice. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants RO1 CA109618 (B.L.), ROI HL080244 (J.A.H.), ROI HL090842 (J.A.H.), ROI AI084887 (H.W.V.), RCI DK086629 (P.E.S.), RO1 CA112023 (P.E.S.) and 1PO1 DK0887761 (P.E.S.).
PY - 2012/1/26
Y1 - 2012/1/26
N2 - Exercise has beneficial effects on human health, including protection against metabolic disorders such as diabetes. However, the cellular mechanisms underlying these effects are incompletely understood. The lysosomal degradation pathway, autophagy, is an intracellular recycling system that functions during basal conditions in organelle and protein quality control. During stress, increased levels of autophagy permit cells to adapt to changing nutritional and energy demands through protein catabolism. Moreover, in animal models, autophagy protects against diseases such as cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, infections, inflammatory diseases, ageing and insulin resistance. Here we show that acute exercise induces autophagy in skeletal and cardiac muscle of fed mice. To investigate the role of exercise-mediated autophagy in vivo, we generated mutant mice that show normal levels of basal autophagy but are deficient in stimulus (exercise-or starvation)-induced autophagy. These mice (termed BCL2 AAA mice) contain knock-in mutations in BCL2 phosphorylation sites (Thr69Ala, Ser70Ala and Ser84Ala) that prevent stimulus-induced disruption of the BCL2-beclin-1 complex and autophagy activation. BCL2 AAA mice show decreased endurance and altered glucose metabolism during acute exercise, as well as impaired chronic exercise-mediated protection against high-fat-diet-induced glucose intolerance. Thus, exercise induces autophagy, BCL2 is a crucial regulator of exercise-(and starvation)-induced autophagy in vivo, and autophagy induction may contribute to the beneficial metabolic effects of exercise.
AB - Exercise has beneficial effects on human health, including protection against metabolic disorders such as diabetes. However, the cellular mechanisms underlying these effects are incompletely understood. The lysosomal degradation pathway, autophagy, is an intracellular recycling system that functions during basal conditions in organelle and protein quality control. During stress, increased levels of autophagy permit cells to adapt to changing nutritional and energy demands through protein catabolism. Moreover, in animal models, autophagy protects against diseases such as cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, infections, inflammatory diseases, ageing and insulin resistance. Here we show that acute exercise induces autophagy in skeletal and cardiac muscle of fed mice. To investigate the role of exercise-mediated autophagy in vivo, we generated mutant mice that show normal levels of basal autophagy but are deficient in stimulus (exercise-or starvation)-induced autophagy. These mice (termed BCL2 AAA mice) contain knock-in mutations in BCL2 phosphorylation sites (Thr69Ala, Ser70Ala and Ser84Ala) that prevent stimulus-induced disruption of the BCL2-beclin-1 complex and autophagy activation. BCL2 AAA mice show decreased endurance and altered glucose metabolism during acute exercise, as well as impaired chronic exercise-mediated protection against high-fat-diet-induced glucose intolerance. Thus, exercise induces autophagy, BCL2 is a crucial regulator of exercise-(and starvation)-induced autophagy in vivo, and autophagy induction may contribute to the beneficial metabolic effects of exercise.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84863393597&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/nature10758
DO - 10.1038/nature10758
M3 - Article
C2 - 22258505
AN - SCOPUS:84863393597
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 481
SP - 511
EP - 515
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 7382
ER -