Circulating exosome‐like vesicle and skeletal muscle microRNAs are altered with age and resistance training Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • AbstractThe age‐related loss of skeletal muscle mass and functionality, known as sarcopenia, is a critical risk factor for morbidity and all‐cause mortality. Resistance exercise training (RET) is the primary countermeasure to fight sarcopenia and ageing. Altered intercellular communication is a hallmark of ageing, which is not well elucidated. Circulating extracellular vesicles (EVs), including exosomes, contribute to intercellular communication by delivering microRNAs (miRNAs), which modulate post‐translational modifications, and have been shown to be released following exercise. There is little evidence regarding how EVs or EV‐miRNAs are altered with age or RET. Therefore, we sought to characterize circulating EVs in young and older individuals, prior to and following a 12‐week resistance exercise programme. Plasma EVs were isolated using size exclusion chromatography and ultracentrifugation. We found that ageing reduced circulating expression markers of CD9, and CD81. Using late‐passage human myotubes as a model for ageing in vitro, we show significantly lower secreted exosome‐like vesicles (ELVs). Further, levels of circulating ELV‐miRNAs associated with muscle health were lower in older individuals at baseline but increased following RET to levels comparable to young. Muscle biopsies show similar age‐related reductions in miRNA expressions, with largely no effect of training. This is reflected in vitro, where aged myotubes show significantly reduced expression of endogenous and secreted muscle‐specific miRNAs (myomiRs). Lastly, proteins associated with ELV and miRNA biogenesis were significantly higher in both older skeletal muscle tissues and aged human myotubes. Together we show that ageing significantly affects ELV and miRNA cargo biogenesis, and release. RET can partially normalize this altered intercellular communication. imageKey points We show that ageing reduces circulating expression of exosome‐like vesicle (ELV) markers, CD9 and CD81. Using late‐passage human skeletal myotubes as a model of ageing, we show that secreted ELV markers are significantly reduced in vitro. We find circulating ELV miRNAs associated with skeletal muscle health are lower in older individuals but can increase following resistance exercise training (RET). In skeletal muscle, we find altered expression of miRNAs in older individuals, with no effect of RET. Late‐passage myotubes also appear to have aberrant production of endogenous myomiRs with lower abundance than youthful counterparts In older skeletal muscle and late‐passage myotubes, proteins involved with ELV‐ and miRNA biogenesis are upregulated

authors

  • Xhuti, Donald
  • Nilsson, Mats I
  • Manta, Katherine
  • Tarnopolsky, Mark
  • Nederveen, Joshua P

publication date

  • November 2023