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Slc20a1/Pit1 and Slc20a2/Pit2 are essential for normal skeletal myofiber function and survival.

Citation
Chande, S., et al. “Slc20A1/Pit1 And Slc20A2/Pit2 Are Essential For Normal Skeletal Myofiber Function And Survival.”. Scientific Reports, p. 3069.
Center Yale University
Author Sampada Chande, Daniel Caballero, Bryan B Ho, Jonathan Fetene, Juan Serna, Dominik Pesta, Ali Nasiri, Michael Jurczak, Nicholas W Chavkin, Nati Hernando, Cecilia M Giachelli, Carsten A Wagner, Caroline Zeiss, Gerald I Shulman, Clemens Bergwitz
Abstract

Low blood phosphate (Pi) reduces muscle function in hypophosphatemic disorders. Which Pi transporters are required and whether hormonal changes due to hypophosphatemia contribute to muscle function is unknown. To address these questions we generated a series of conditional knockout mice lacking one or both house-keeping Pi transporters Pit1 and Pit2 in skeletal muscle (sm), using the postnatally expressed human skeletal actin-cre. Simultaneous conditional deletion of both transporters caused skeletal muscle atrophy, resulting in death by postnatal day P13. smPit1, smPit2 and three allele mutants are fertile and have normal body weights, suggesting a high degree of redundance for the two transporters in skeletal muscle. However, these mice show a gene-dose dependent reduction in running activity also seen in another hypophosphatemic model (Hyp mice). In contrast to Hyp mice, grip strength is preserved. Further evaluation of the mechanism shows reduced ERK1/2 activation and stimulation of AMP kinase in skeletal muscle from smPit1; smPit2 mice consistent with energy-stress. Similarly, C2C12 myoblasts show a reduced oxygen consumption rate mediated by Pi transport-dependent and ERK1/2-dependent metabolic Pi sensing pathways. In conclusion, we here show that Pit1 and Pit2 are essential for normal myofiber function and survival, insights which may improve management of hypophosphatemic myopathy.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Scientific reports
Volume
10
Issue
1
Number of Pages
3069
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
2045-2322
DOI
10.1038/s41598-020-59430-4
Alternate Journal
Sci Rep
PMID
32080237
PMCID
PMC7033257
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