APOE4 Exerts Partial Diet-dependent Effects on Energy Expenditure and Skeletal Muscle Mitochondrial Pathways in a Preclinical Model.

在临床前模型中,APOE4 对能量消耗和骨骼肌线粒体通路产生部分饮食依赖性影响

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作者:Johnson Chelsea N, Lysaker Colton R, Gast Elaine C, McCoin Colin S, Kemna Riley E, Fuller Kelly N Z, Kugler Benjamin A, Franczak Edziu, Csikos Vivien, Allen Julie, John Casey S, Wolf MaryJane A, Morris Matthew E, Thyfault John P, Wilkins Heather M, Geiger Paige C, Morris Jill K
Apolipoprotein E4 (APOE4) is the greatest genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's (AD) and is linked to whole-body metabolic dysfunction. However, it is unclear how APOE4 interacts with modifiable factors like diet to impact tissues central to regulating whole-body metabolism. We examined APOE4- and Western diet-driven effects in skeletal muscle using APOE3 (control) and APOE4 targeted replacement mice on a C57BL/6NTac background fed a high-fat diet (HFD, 45% kcal fat) or low-fat diet (LFD, 10% kcal fat) for 4 months (n = 7-8 per genotype/diet/sex combination). We assessed body composition and whole-body outcomes linked to skeletal muscle function including respiratory exchange ratio (RER) and resting energy expenditure (REE). In skeletal muscle, we evaluated the proteome and mitochondrial respiration. In males only, APOE4 drove greater gains in fat mass and lower gains in lean mass on both diets. APOE4 did not affect daily RER but was associated with elevated REE in males and lower REE in HFD females after covarying for body composition. Skeletal muscle proteomics showed APOE4 exerts several diet- and sex-specific effects on mitochondrial pathways, including elevations in branched-chain amino catabolism in HFD males and reductions in oxidative phosphorylation in LFD females. This did not translate to differences in skeletal muscle mitochondrial respiration, suggesting that compensatory mechanisms may sustain mitochondrial function at this age. Our work indicates that genetic risk may mediate early life effects on skeletal muscle mitochondria and energy expenditure that are partially dependent on diet. This has important implications for mitigating ad risk in APOE4 carriers.

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