1 Endocrine and Metabolism Unit, University Department of Medicine, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, U.K.
2 MRC Unit, Southampton General Hospital, Southampton, U.K.
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ABSTRACT |
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INTRODUCTION |
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Skeletal muscle is a major target tissue for insulin-mediated glucose uptake, metabolism, and utilization in humans. Indeed, impaired insulin action in skeletal muscle is responsible for the majority of the decreased levels of nonoxidative glucose disposal that are observed in subjects presenting with the metabolic syndrome, obesity, and type 2 diabetes (7,8). Importantly, quantitative differences in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and glycogen synthase activity in cultured skeletal myoblasts closely agree with those for in vivo glucose disposal and muscle glycogen synthase activity in type 2 diabetic and normal subjects from whom the myoblasts originated (9,10). This suggests that cultured skeletal myoblasts are a useful model system with which to investigate mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of insulin resistance in humans.
Glucocorticoids are potent antagonists of insulin action and, when in excess, can promote insulin resistance and obesity (11). The metabolic and Cushings syndromes share many features, suggesting that abnormalities of glucocorticoid hormone action may contribute to the pathogenesis of the metabolic syndrome (12). Increased glucocorticoid hormone action in skeletal muscle has been shown to impair insulin signaling through a variety of pathways (13,14), to an extent that mimics that observed in the profoundly insulin-resistant state. Glucocorticoids also induce gluconeogenesis (12, 14,15), stimulate differentiation of functional fat cells from preadipocyte cells, and promote lipolysis and triglyceride storage, predominantly in the increased depots of visceral fat that are associated with the metabolic and Cushings syndromes (16). This has led to the hypothesis that increases in glucocorticoid hormone action may represent a common primary etiology underpinning these cardiovascular disease risk factors.
Conflicting data from case-control and cross-sectional analyses of circulating cortisol levels and hypothalamopituitary adrenal axis activities in men and women with contrasting levels of blood pressure, glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, and hyperlipidemia (1520) have led to suggestions that the principal mechanisms underlying such increases in glucocorticoid hormone action are those regulating tissue sensitivity to circulating glucocorticoid. This is supported by studies describing the absence of Cushingoid features and metabolic abnormalities in hypercortisolemic patients (21) and, conversely, the manifestation of the Cushings syndrome phenotype in hypocortisolemic patients (22).
The magnitude of tissue sensitivity to circulating glucocorticoid is regulated by levels of cortisol binding that are in turn largely determined by the expression of both the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) (23) and 11ß-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11ß-HSD) (24). Recent studies indicate the ubiquitous expression of both the ligand-binding GR and non-ligand-binding GRß isoforms, which comprise splice variants from the same GR gene (23,25). Similarly, two isoforms of 11ß-HSD have been characterized and cloned. 11ß-HSD1, expressed predominantly in classical glucocorticoid target tissues, encodes low-affinity NADP(H)-dependent 11-oxoreductase activity, generating active cortisol from cortisone. In contrast, 11ß-HSD2 encodes a NAD-dependent high-affinity unidirectional 11-dehydrogenase metabolizing cortisol to cortisone. 11ß-HSD1 is thought to modulate glucocorticoid hormone action by regulating ligand supply to the GR (24). Recent human studies point to key roles for both the GR and 11ß-HSD1 in the etiology of raised blood pressure, insulin resistance, hyperglycemia (12,26), and central obesity (27). Indeed, the insulin sensitivity of human volunteers has been shown to be significantly improved by pharmacological inhibition of 11ß-HSD1 11-oxoreductase activity (28). The physiological importance of both the GR and 11ß-HSD1 is further supported by animal studies in which pharmacological blockade of the GR abolishes high-fat diet-induced adiposity, glucose intolerance, and insulin resistance (29), and deletion of the 11ß-HSD1 gene attenuates gluconeogenesis despite high circulating glucocorticoid levels (30).
We describe for the first time strong associations between in vivo glucose disposal, obesity, and raised blood pressure and the expression of GR and 11ß-HSD in human skeletal muscle cells in vitro. These data suggest important molecular mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of these key features of the metabolic syndrome.
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RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS |
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Skeletal muscle biopsy and cell culture.
All reagents were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (Poole, U.K.) and Gibco-Life Technologies (Paisley, U.K.), unless otherwise stated.
Tissue was obtained by Bergstrom needle biopsy (26143 mg) of the vastus lateralis muscle in the thigh of 14 Caucasian men, the characteristics of whom are shown in Table 1. Two to three biopsies of muscle tissue were obtained from each subject during the procedure and then immediately microdissected free of any fat or connective tissue at 4°C. Aliquots were immediately snap frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -80°C for subsequent morphological and molecular studies. The majority of material was, however, prepared for isolation of viable proliferating skeletal muscle satellite cells. We optimized techniques for the isolation of viable satellite cells and the dispersal and proliferation of skeletal muscle cells from them using significantly smaller biopsies than has previously been reported (31).
The establishment and proliferation of human skeletal muscle cells, which exist either as mononuclear myoblasts or as fused multinuclear myotubes, was performed by modification of previously described methods (32). Prior ethical committee approval was obtained. After excision, biopsy material was transferred to transport medium (Hams F10 with 20% FCS, 1,000 units/ml penicillin, 50 µg/ml streptomycin, and 1 µg/ml amphotericine B), which was maintained at 4°C. Fat and connective tissue was carefully microdissected and the remaining muscle finely chopped with scissors. Tissue minces were washed with ice-cold serum-free medium (three times) and, after resuspension in prewarmed sterile-cell dispersal solution (0.05% trypsin and 0.05 mol/l Na EDTA in PBS), transferred to a sterile conical flask and horizontally shaken at 190 rpm for 60 min at 37°C. Tissue debris was allowed to settle for 1 min, the supernatant was centrifuged (550g, 2 min at room temperature), and the isolated cell pellet was resuspended in cell growth medium (Dulbeccos Modified Eagles Medium [DMEM] with 0.11 g/l sodium pyruvate, 200 units/ml penicillin, 50 µg/ml streptomycin, 0.3 mg/ml L-glutamine, 0.25 µ g/ml amphotericin B, and 20% FCS). The cells were washed twice in cell growth medium and plated onto gelatin/fibronectin-coated 10-cm dishes in growth medium supplemented with 1% chick embryo extract and 1025% conditioned medium from highly proliferating myoblasts and placed in a humidified 95% air/5% CO2 atmosphere at 37°C (Biohit; Wolf Laboratories, Pockington, York, U.K.). Culture media was changed twice weekly but involved removal and replacement of only three-quarters of the total on each occasion. The period to 95% confluency was largely dependent on the yield of viable satellite cells but varied between 6 and 9 weeks for initially plated cells. It is the satellite cells that retain the capacity for proliferation in culture. They reside between the sarcoplasmic reticulum and the basement membrane and represent a small fraction of the biopsy material itself. As such, the pooling of tissue minces from the two to three samples obtained from each subject, coupled with the optimization of cell isolation protocols, maximized the yield of viable satellite cells from each very-small aliquot of total biopsy material (1550 mg). Experimental analyses were performed on 95% confluent cells between passages 3 and 12. Isolated cells were >99% skeletal myoblasts, as confirmed by morphological and immunohistochemical analyses.
Immunohistochemical analyses.
Cells were washed with PBS, air dried, and fixed with either 10% formol saline or 4% paraformaldehyde. Five to six circles (20-mm diameter) per dish of cells were marked out using a hydrophobic resin to allow multiple parallel immunostaining with various antisera. Nonspecific immunostaining was diminished by incubation with blocking solution (5% serum from the species in which the secondary antisera was raised; obtained from Dako) in PBS for 1 h at room temperature, followed by washing with PBS (three times), and incubation with primary antisera for human GR at 1:100 to 1:1,000 (affinity-purified rabbit polyclonal antibody was raised against a 16-amino acid peptide corresponding to the NH2-terminus of GR that is common to both the 95-kDa GR and -ß isoforms, obtained from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA), skeletal muscle desmin antisera at 1:10 to 1:100, mouse monoclonal sarcomeric
-actinin antisera at 1:100 to 1:1,000, mouse monoclonal anti-human fibroblast surface protein antisera at 1:500 to 1:2,000, and mouse monoclonal anti
-smooth muscle actin at 1:500 to 1:2,000 for either 2 h at room temperature or overnight at 4°C in a humidified box, as previously described (32). Working dilutions of antisera were prepared using PBS/0.05% Tween 20 (PBST). Omission of primary antisera, absorption of primary antisera with appropriate purified proteins, and use of nonimmune sera (Dako A/S Denmark) served as negative controls of specific immunostaining (data not shown). After further washing with PBS (three times), cells were incubated with horseradish peroxidase- conjugated anti-rabbit IgG or anti-goat IgM secondary antisera at 1:1,000 to 1:2,500 for a further 1 h at room temperature, and immunostaining was detected using a brief incubation with diaminobenzadine and visualized under light microscopy (Fig. 1).
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Although the maximum absorbance for steroids with an ,ß -unsaturated ketone in the A-ring can typically be found at 240 nm, the absorbance maximum for both cortisol and cortisone using this technique (using several scanning UV spectrophotometers) was 247 nmol/l. This technique has been fully validated against fluorescence detection and GC-MS (S.J.D., unpublished observations). The limits of detection for this technique were estimated to be 1.6 ± 0.8 nmol/l (i.e.,
2.4 ng steroid injected onto the column) for all steroids examined. Mean analytical recovery for cortisol and cortisone were 98.9 ± 2.5% and 96.5 ± 3.0%, respectively. Analytical imprecision (coefficient of variation [CV] %) was estimated to be 6.1 ± 1.2% (within batch) and 8.3 ± 2.4% (between batch) for a range of typical in vivo cortisol and cortisone concentrations.
In addition to cortisol and cortisone, this technique was capable of detecting all steroids, with an unsaturated ring A, and was validated for the quantitative estimation of 6ß-hydroxycortsol, 20 -dihydrocortisol, 20ß-dihydrocortisol, 20
-dihydrocortisone, 20ß-dihydrocortisone, cortisol, cortisone, dexamethasone, corticosterone, 11-deoxycortisol, 11-deoxycorticosterone, 17
-hydroxyprogesterone, androstenedione, and progesterone. Although the more polar tetrahydrometabolites of cortisol and cortisone would not be detected by this technique, it is highly unlikely that this degree of metabolism (more akin to hepatic than peripheral metabolism of glucocorticoids) would occur in human skeletal myoblasts. Importantly, the sum of cortisol and cortisone that was quantitatively extracted from the cell culture medium subsequent to incubation was not significantly different from that which had been added before incubation (within the aforementioned limits of experimental error and methodological imprecision). This is consistent with there being undetectable levels of either cortisol or cortisone in cell culture medium containing FCS. Because 11ß-HSD1 behaved exclusively as an 11-oxoreductase in these cells, any cortisol present in the cell culture medium remained unmetabolized. This was confirmed by assay of cortisol concentrations after incubation of cells with cortisol during assays of 11-dehydrogenase activity.
To maintain first-order kinetics for the analysis of 11ß-HSD1 activity in these cells, substrate (i.e., cortisone) concentrations and sampling times were established so that reaction rates were well within the linear part of the reaction velocity versus substrate concentration plot, as we have previously described (33).
Western blot.
Cells were washed with ice-cold PBS (three times), gently scraped from flasks, briefly centrifuged (750g, 2 min), and suspended in either PBS/1 mmol/l PMSF (phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride) (for total cell protein) or NP40 lysis buffer (0.05% NP40 in phosphate buffer, pH 7.2) and subjected to differential centrifugation to enable isolation of nuclear and cytosolic protein. Varying concentrations of protein, assayed by Bradford method using a commercially available kit (Biorad Laboratories, Herts, U.K.), were mixed with one volume of SDS-glycerol/ß -mercaptoethanol/bromophenol blue loading buffer, heated to 95°C for 5 min, and electrophoresed alongside molecular weight markers through 4% stacking and 1012% resolving denaturing SDS-PAGE gels. After electroblotting (35 V · 0.8 mA-1 · cm-2) onto Hybond C membranes (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Bucks, U.K.), samples were incubated with blocking solution (10% milk powder/PBS/0.05% Tween 20/1% goat serum) for 1 h at room temperature, followed by incubation with rabbit anti-human GR polyclonal antisera (Santa Cruz Biotechnologies) in 1% milk powder/PBS/0.05%Tween 20 for 3 h at room temperature. After washing with PBS (three times), membranes were incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG at 1:100 for 1 h at room temperature. Human glucocorticoid receptor (hGR) was visualized using the enhanced chemiluminescence plus system (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech), exposed to autoradiograhic film within its linear range, and then the signal was quantified by scanning laser densitometry.
RT-PCR.
RNA was isolated from tissue and cultured myocytes using a single-step acidified phenol/chloroform extraction method (RNAzol B; Biogenesis, Poole, U.K.). First-strand DNA was synthesized from 10 µg total RNA using RT-driven primer extension from either random hexamers or 3' -antisense oligonucleotide primers corresponding to human GR, GRß, 11ß-HSD1, 11ß-HSD2, mineralocorticoid receptor (MR), and sodium-potassium adenosine triphosphatase
1 subunit, as we have previously described (34). The upstream primer used for the amplification of GR
and -ß mRNA was identical, i.e., 5'-ACTTACACCTGGATGACCAAAT-3', whereas the downstream primers were specific for either GR
, i.e., 5' -TTCAATACTCATGGTCTTATCC-3', or GRß, i.e., 5' -TCCTATAGTTGTCGATGAGCAT-3'. The sequences of the primers used for the detection of the other genes have been previously described (34). Briefly, RNA was heated to 65°C for 5 min, snap cooled to 4°C, mixed with reaction buffer (50 mmol/l Tris-HCl, 50 mmol/l KCl, 10 mmol/l MgCl2, 10 mmol/l DTT, and 0.5 mmol/l spermidine, pH 8.3), ribonuclease inhibitor (RNAsin; Promega, Southampton, Hampshire, U.K.), dNTPs (10 mmol/l each of dATP, dCTP, dGTP, and dTTP), 30 pmol/l primers, and 200 U Superscript II (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) in DEPC (diethyl pyrocarbonate)-treated water at a volume of 50 µl, and incubated at 42°C for 1 h. Five to ten percent of this reaction served as a template for the PCR amplification of fragments of these mRNAs using specific sense and antisense primers to generate DNA products of the predicted sizes shown in Table 2. cDNAs, including pT7/T3 hGR
cDNA fragment, pT7/T3 hGRß cDNA fragment, pT7/T3-hGR
full-length cDNA, 11ß-HSD1/pcDNAI, h11ß -HSD2/pGEM4Z, hMR cDNA, and hNa/K ATPase
1 cDNA and RT products from previous assays served as positive controls for the PCR step. A total RNA pool served as positive controls for the RT step. Negative controls included PCR of non-reverse-transcribed RNA samples and omission of primers from both RT and PCRs. RT-PCR products were electrophoretically fractionated on 1% ethidium bromide- stained agarose gels.
Northern blot.
Total RNA (3050 µg/lane) from tissue and cultured myocytes was electrophoresed alongside RNA molecular weight markers (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) in a 1.5% agarose/15% formaldehyde/1x MOPS gel at 100 mA for 46 h, followed by transfer to Hybond N+ membranes. Parallel dot-blot analyses of each RNA preparation were also performed using a Hybridot apparatus (Gibco-Life Technologies) to assist quantification of mRNA and recorded as arbitrary units in relation to those for 18S rRNA by scanning laser densitometry. Membranes were hybridized with either cDNA or cRNA probes for GR, 11ß -HSD1, and 18S in either 0.77 mol/l sodium phosphate/5 mmol/l EDTA/7% SDS/200 µg/ml denatured salmon sperm DNA (ssDNA) buffer (pH 7.2) at 65°C for cDNA probes or 50% deionized fomamide/2x SSPE/5x Denhardts solution/ 10% dextran sulfate/0.1% SDS and 200 µg/ml ssDNA buffer at 42°C for cDNA probes or 63°C for cRNA probes. Membranes were washed in 2 x sodium chloride-sodium citrate (SSC) (1 x SSC = 150 mmol/l NaCl/15 mmol/l trisodium citrate) - 0.1% SDS (10 min at room temperature) and up to a maximum stringency of 0.1 x SSC - 0.1% SDS (30 min at 68°C). Hybridization signals were analyzed using a Storm 850 phosphorimager (Molecular Dynamics, Piscataway, NJ) and were exposed to autoradiographic film (DuPont-Cronex) between intensifying screens at -70°C for 110 days, such that the signal fell within the linear range of the film. Before rehybridization with other probes, cDNA probes were removed from membranes by washing with 1% SDS (3 h at 70°C) and cRNA, and then 18S rDNA probes were removed by washing with 0.1% SDS at room temperature.
Nucleic acid probes.
cDNA probes for hGR (35), h11ß-HSD1 (36), and ribosomal 18S (37) were radiolabelled with [32P]deoxy-CTP (3,000 Ci/mmol) by random priming of the excised cDNA fragment using commercially available kits (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). To improve sensitivity, antisense GR cRNA probes were synthesized by in vitro transcription from pT7/T3-hGRa cDNA by T3 RNA polymerase after linearization with Kpn1 (unable to distinguish between GR and -ß mRNA) as previously described (25,38). Shorter antisense cRNA probes (
0.6 kb) for the detection of total hGR were also generated from the pT7/T3-hGR
cDNA by T3 RNA polymerase after linearization with SspI. GR isoform-specific probes were also synthesized as previously described (25,38) from the 537 bp PstI/KpnI fragment pT7/T3-
cDNA by T7 RNA polymerase after linearization with PstI (to detect GR
mRNA alone) and from the 960bp PstI/SstI fragment pT7/T3-ß cDNA using T7 RNA polymerase. After linearization with NsiI, a 581-bp probe was generated (to detect GRß mRNA alone). Antisense h11ß-HSD1 cRNA probes (1.2 kb) were generated from the full-length h11ß-HSD1 cDNA (36) and subcloned into pBluescript KS+ using T3 RNA polymerase after linearization with HindIII. All cRNA probes were radiolabelled by incorporation of [32P]UTP (3,000 Ci/mmol), and synthesis of > 90% full-length cRNA probes was confirmed by autoradiography of probes subjected to denaturing (7 mol/l urea) polyacrylamide (6%) gel electrophoresis.
The hGR cDNAs were kindly provided by Drs. Robert Oakley and John Cidlowski (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD), the h11ß-HSD1 cDNA was from Professor Perrin White (University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX), and the r18S rDNA was from Professor Ira Wool (University of Chicago).
Statistical analyses.
Kolmogorov-Smirnov analysis indicated that the data were normally distributed. All data presented are expressed as means ± SE. Data were analyzed using an unpaired Students t test. The significance of linear regression analyses was analyzed by Pearson correlation. Each muscle cell experiment or analysis was performed in triplicate with SEs maintained at <10% of the mean. Where appropriate, f test analysis was performed to determine the statistical difference between two slopes during kinetic analyses. Values were considered significant at P < 0.05.
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RESULTS |
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GR expression appeared to be distributed in both nuclear and cytosolic compartments, despite the absence of glucocorticoid in culture medium containing 20% FCS (Fig. 1D). Although 11ß-HSD1 protein was similarly detected in every muscle cell (data not shown), a higher magnification photomicrograph of a single skeletal muscle cell shows that 11ß-HSD1 expression, in contrast with that for the GR, was predominantly confined to the cytosol (Fig. 1E). This was confirmed by Western blot analyses of GR and 11ß-HSD1 expression in nuclear and cytosolic protein fractions isolated by differential centrifugation (data not shown).
Characterization of glucocorticoid hormone signaling in cultured myoblasts and muscle tissue
Glucocorticoid receptor expression.
Analyses of gene expression by RT-PCR using primers specific for GR, GRß, MR, and constitutively expressed Na/K-ATPase
1 subunit (across a range of PCR cycle numbers) revealed expression of GR
and -ß (Fig. 2A) but did not reveal MR mRNA in skeletal muscle biopsies (data not shown). Similar patterns of expression were evident in cultured myoblasts under basal glucocorticoid-free conditions, with the exception that GRß mRNA was not expressed in myoblasts from any of the subjects (Fig. 2A). The detection of GRß mRNA in cells cultured in the presence of >100 nmol/l cortisol suggests that GRß expression in skeletal myoblasts may be upregulated by glucocorticoid (39). This necessitated the use of GR
-specific cRNA probes for quantitative analyses of the expression of the ligand-binding GR
variant. Northern blot analyses indicated abundant expression of GR
mRNA that predominantly comprised a 7.0-kb species in skeletal myoblasts (Fig. 2B). Detection of 95 kDa GR protein by Western blot using polyclonal GR antisera confirmed translation of GR mRNA in these cells (Fig. 2B). Importantly, there was close agreement between GR
mRNA and GR protein levels in analyses of GR expression.
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11ß-HSD expression.
Analyses of gene expression by RT-PCR using primers specific for 11ß-HSD1 and -HSD2 (across a range of PCR cycle numbers) revealed expression of 11ß-HSD1 but not -HSD2 mRNA in skeletal muscle biopsies and cultured myoblasts that were established from them (data not shown). Northern blot analyses of RNA isolated from human skeletal myoblasts revealed abundant expression of 1.4 kb 11ß-HSD1 mRNA (Fig. 2C). Kinetic analyses revealed that this encodes low-affinity 11-oxoreductase activity with a Km for cortisone of 0.5 µmol/l (Fig. 2D). Importantly, 11-dehydrogenase activity was undetectable in intact cells. Preincubation of myoblasts with physiological concentrations of cortisol for up to 96 h resulted in a significant dose-dependent increase in 11ß-HSD1 mRNA expression at cortisol concentrations >0.1 µ mol/l (Fig. 2C). In keeping with the gene expression data (Fig. 2C), kinetic analyses of enzyme activity (represented by the Hanes plots shown in Fig. 2D) indicated that preincubation of cells with 0.5 µmol/l cortisol had no significant effect on the affinity of 11ß-HSD1 for cortisone but markedly increased the Vmax of the 11-oxoreductase activity (P < 0.001). This was deduced from f analysis of the statistical significance of the difference between the two slopes shown in the Hanes plot (Fig. 2D). Analyses of 11-oxoreductase activity using Eadie-Hofstee plots (data not shown) revealed almost identical Vmax and Km values as those obtained by Hanes plot analysis. This further supports the validity of the observations of the marked response in 11-oxoreductase activity to treatment by glucocorticoid.
No 11-dehydrogenase activity was detectable, either under basal glucocorticoid-free conditions or after preincubation with cortisol. Consequently, the cortisol-induced increase in 11ß-HSD1 mRNA expression resulted exclusively in increased 11-oxoreductase activity-mediated intracellular synthesis of active cortisol from cortisone. Furthermore, the sensitivity of 11ß-HSD1 response to cortisol would not have been confounded by potential conversion of cortisol to inactive cortisone. Auto-upregulation of 11ß-HSD1 mRNA and 11-oxoreductase activity by cortisol was abolished by co-incubation with a 10-fold molar excess of RU38486 (data not shown), indicating that this effect is mediated exclusively by GR.
Importantly, between-subject differences in levels of GR and 11ß -HSD1 mRNA expression remained unchanged, irrespective of cell passage number (passages 312) or cell density (up to 98% confluence, i.e., 2.9 x 106 cells/25-cm2 flask), either during basal conditions or after incubation with glucocorticoid. Thus, variability attributable to potentially important sources of methodological error was minor, particularly when compared with the marked between-subject differences for both GR (as shown in Figs. 3A and B, 4A, and 5A) and 11ß-HSD1 (Figs. 3B and 7A).
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Because levels of GR expression are dependent on the prevailing concentrations of glucocorticoid (Fig. 2B), we repeated these analyses after preincubation of myoblasts with 0.2 µmol/l cortisol for 48 h. Importantly, under these conditions, the relationships between skeletal myoblast GR
expression and in vivo glucose disposal rate (Fig. 5B), BMI (Fig. 5C), percent body fat (Fig. 5D), and systolic blood pressure (Fig. 5E) were similar to those observed under basal glucocorticoid-free conditions. There was a strong correlation (r2 = 0.87, P < 0.001) between GR
expression under basal conditions and after exposure to physiological concentrations of cortisol. Although glucocorticoid-dependent inhibition of GR
expression occurred across all subjects, myoblasts with higher basal levels of GR
expression also had higher levels of GR
expression after exposure to cortisol (Fig. 6A). No statistically significant associations were evident between muscle cell expression of GR
and the age of the subjects from whom the cells originated.
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No statistically significant associations were evident between skeletal muscle cell expression of 11ß-HSD1 and the age of the subjects from whom the cells originated.
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DISCUSSION |
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Studies investigating mechanisms underlying GR expression and GR downregulation by its ligand, cortisol, indicate that this occurs predominantly at the level of mRNA transcription and stability and, to a much lesser degree, through post-translational increases in GR turnover (23). Thus, most GR regulation studies have focused on analyses of GR mRNA expression (23,40). The close agreement between levels of GR mRNA and protein evident in our study is consistent with predominantly transcriptional regulation of GR expression in human skeletal myoblasts. Abolition of this GR downregulation by blockade of GR
with RU38486 confirms that this is exclusively mediated by the ligand-binding GR
. Importantly, although GR
downregulation by cortisol is evident in myoblasts from all subjects, the strong association between basal levels of GR
mRNA expression and GR
mRNA expression after exposure to cortisol and their associations with glucose disposal rate, BMI, and systolic blood pressure suggest that at physiological cortisol concentrations, myoblast expression of GR
is generally greater in individuals with key features of the metabolic syndrome.
GR exposure to intracellular cortisol is largely regulated by isoforms of 11ß-HSD, which mediate interconversion between cortisol and inactive cortisone (24). Recent studies suggest that 11ß-HSD1-mediated regulation of intracellular conversion of cortisone to cortisol plays a key role in the etiology of insulin resistance (12,28), central obesity (27), and hypertension (26). Pharmacological 11ß-HSD1 inhibition experiments in humans (28), coupled with 11ß-HSD1 gene knockout studies (30), suggest that reduced hepatic 11ß-HSD1 activity may increase insulin sensitivity regardless of circulating glucocorticoid levels. 11ß-HSD1 11-oxoreductase activity may, therefore, serve to maintain intracellular cortisol concentrations at higher levels than those present in the circulation. We have detected abundant levels of 11ß-HSD1 gene expression in cultured human skeletal myoblasts and demonstrated that it behaves exclusively as an 11-oxoreductase, with rates of activity similar to those reported in other isolated human cells (27, 33,40). Unlike GR
expression, basal levels of 11ß-HSD1 expression in skeletal myoblasts are not associated with features of the metabolic syndrome.
We have demonstrated that 11-oxoreductase activity in human skeletal myoblasts is sensitively upregulated by physiological concentrations of cortisol and that this arises from increased levels of 11ß-HSD1 mRNA expression. These findings accord with previous studies suggesting that 11ß-HSD1 11-oxoreductase activity is increased by glucocorticoid in cultured adipose stromal cells and hepatocytes (27,41). Importantly, in the presence of glucocorticoid, skeletal myoblast expression of 11ß-HSD1 (like that for GR) is inversely correlated with glucose disposal rate and positively associated with BMI and blood pressure in vivo. Abolition of glucocorticoid induction of 11ß-HSD1 in human skeletal myoblasts by RU38486 confirms that this effect is mediated exclusively by the ligand-binding GR
variant. As such, it is likely that the magnitude of the 11ß-HSD1 response in skeletal muscle cells is directly dependent on basal and glucocorticoid-dependent levels of GR
expression.
Upregulation of 11ß-HSD1 11-oxoreductase activity represents a potentially powerful mechanism by which glucocorticoid hormone action may be amplified several fold within the cell. In the absence of limiting factors, this would be predicted to perpetually amplify glucocorticoid hormone action within skeletal muscle and other insulin targets, i.e., fat and liver cells in which auto-upregulation of 11ß-HSD1 has been reported (27,41). We report for the first time that a key factor limiting this process in human skeletal muscle cells is the expression of GR. We propose that GR
expression is likely to be the principal determinant of the equilibrium between 11ß-HSD1 and GR
activity, and the balance of this equilibrium dictates the magnitude of overall glucocorticoid hormone action within the skeletal muscle cell.
Our data suggest that the position of equilibrium between 11ß-HSD1 and GR activity is markedly altered in skeletal muscle cells from subjects with features of the metabolic syndrome because of altered GR expression. The position of this equilibrium would maintain much higher intracellular cortisol concentrations (and hence glucocorticoid hormone action) in these subjects. In this respect, the absence of any effects of either insulin or glucose on GR
expression in human skeletal myoblasts supports the hypothesis that maintaining high levels of GR
expression in skeletal muscle cells in vivo may constitute an important fundamental mechanism at the center of the pathophysiology of the metabolic syndrome. Relatively small increases in the expression of GR
may result in disproportionately large increases in glucocorticoid hormone action and thus promote insulin resistance.
Potent upregulation of GR and/or 11ß-HSD1 by proinflammatory cytokines (interleukin-1ß and tumor necrosis factor-
) in human skeletal myoblasts (39) and other cell-types (42) may shift the position of the GR
/ 11ß-HSD1 equilibrium further toward increased levels of glucocorticoid hormone action. This suggests a novel mechanism by which elevated levels of these cytokines present in the circulationfat and skeletal muscle from obese insulin-resistant subjects (43,44) may induce insulin resistance.
It is extremely unlikely that the strong associations between skeletal muscle cell GR and 11ß-HSD1 expression in vitro and features of the metabolic syndrome in vivo are an artifact of cell culture conditions. Our findings imply that expression of GR and 11ß-HSD1 in cultured human skeletal muscle cells closely correlates with that in skeletal muscle cells in the body. Crucially, between-subject differences were robustly maintained, irrespective of potential sources of methodological variation such as cell passage or density. We were careful to ensure that skeletal myoblasts were not contaminated by other cell types and confirmed that they exhibited classical characteristics of skeletal muscle cells. Furthermore, immunohistochemical analyses indicate homogeneity in levels of both GR
and 11ß-HSD1 expression between cells from each subject. Importantly, previous studies have shown that cultured human skeletal myoblasts also maintain levels of insulin sensitivity that closely correlate with levels of insulin-induced glucose disposal and glycogen synthase activity in vivo (9,10). Thus, the differences in GR
and 11ß -HSD1 expression we have observed among individuals are likely to underestimate the importance of these key determinants of tissue sensitivity to glucocorticoid in pathophysiological mechanisms contributing to the etiology of the metabolic syndrome. Elucidation of the mechanisms underlying the important phenomena we have described, whether genetic, epigenetic, or prenatally programmed, requires further investigation.
Circulating levels of cortisol in obese subjects and those with features of the metabolic syndrome have been reported to be normal, reduced, or elevated (1520) and also exhibit an enhanced response to ACTH stimulation (18). Therefore, the maintenance of high levels of GR, and consequently of 11ß-HSD1 expression in their skeletal myoblasts, irrespective of levels of circulating glucocorticoid, provides a plausible molecular mechanism underlying the key role of glucocorticoid hormone action in the pathogenesis of features of the metabolic syndrome. If similar pathophysiological mechanisms operate in visceral adipose depots, which are rich in GR
and 11ß-HSD1 expression (27,45), this may also promote the increased "Cushings-like" obesity that is frequently associated with the metabolic syndrome (16).
In summary, expression of the ligand-binding GR in skeletal myoblasts is positively associated with features of the metabolic syndrome. Higher levels of GR
expression in myoblasts from subjects with features of the metabolic syndrome suggest increased sensitivity of their skeletal muscle to circulating glucocorticoid. This is associated with increased GR
-mediated upregulation of 11ß-HSD1 and is likely to result in elevated levels of intracellular cortisol. Data from this study, therefore, suggest a role for both GR
and 11ß-HSD1 in skeletal muscle in the pathogenesis of the metabolic syndrome.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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FOOTNOTES |
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Received for publication 26 June 2000 and accepted in revised form 28 December 2001.
11ß-HSD, 11ß-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase; DMEM, Dulbeccos Modified Eagles Medium; GR, glucocorticoid receptor; hGR, human GR; HPLC, high-performance liquid chromatography; MR, mineralocorticoid receptor; SSC, sodium chloride-sodium citrate.
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REFERENCES |
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