Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Myonuclear alterations associated with exercise are independent of age in humans

Edmund Battey, Jacob A. Ross, A. Hoang, Darren Graham Samuel Wilson, Yue Han, Yotam Levy, Ross D. Pollock, Michaeljohn Kalakoutis, Jamie Pugh, Graeme L. Close, Georgina M. Ellison, Norman R. Lazarus, Thomas Iskratsch, Stephen D. R. Harridge, Julien Ochala

The Journal of Physiology · 2023 · ▲ 22 citations

Abstract

Age-related decline in skeletal muscle structure and function can be mitigated by regular exercise. However, the precise mechanisms that govern this are not fully understood. The nucleus plays an active role in translating forces into biochemical signals (mechanotransduction), with the nuclear lamina protein lamin A regulating nuclear shape, nuclear mechanics and ultimately gene expression. Defective lamin A expression causes muscle pathologies and premature ageing syndromes, but the roles of nuclear structure and function in physiological ageing and in exercise adaptations remain obscure. Here, we isolated single muscle fibres and carried out detailed morphological and functional analyses on myonuclei from young and older exercise-trained individuals. Strikingly, myonuclei from trained individuals were more spherical, less deformable, and contained a thicker nuclear lamina than those from untrained individuals. Complementary to this, exercise resulted in increased levels of lamin A and increased myonuclear stiffness in mice. We conclude that exercise is associated with myonuclear remodelling, independently of age, which may contribute to the preservative effects of exercise on muscle function throughout the lifespan. KEY POINTS: The nucleus plays an active role in translating forces into biochemical signals. Myonuclear aberrations in a group of muscular dystrophies called laminopathies suggest that the shape and mechanical properties of myonuclei are important for maintaining muscle function. Here, striking differences are presented in myonuclear shape and mechanics associated with exercise, in both young and old humans. Myonuclei from trained individuals were more spherical, less deformable and contained a thicker nuclear lamina than untrained individuals. It is concluded that exercise is associated with age-independent myonuclear remodelling, which may help to maintain muscle function throughout the lifespan.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1113/jp284128
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-22 MST

Cite this

APA
Battey, E., Ross, J.A., Hoang, A., Wilson, D.G.S., Han, Y., Levy, Y., Pollock, R.D., Kalakoutis, M., Pugh, J., Close, G.L., Ellison, G.M., Lazarus, N.R., Iskratsch, T., Harridge, S.D.R., Ochala, J., &amp; Stroud, M.J. (2023). Myonuclear alterations associated with exercise are independent of age in humans. <em>The Journal of Physiology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1113/jp284128
Vancouver
Battey E, Ross JA, Hoang A, Wilson DGS, Han Y, Levy Y, et al. Myonuclear alterations associated with exercise are independent of age in humans. The Journal of Physiology. 2023. doi:10.1113/jp284128.
BibTeX
@article{edmund2023Myonuc, title = {Myonuclear alterations associated with exercise are independent of age in humans}, author = {Edmund Battey and Jacob A. Ross and A. Hoang and Darren Graham Samuel Wilson and Yue Han and Yotam Levy and Ross D. Pollock and Michaeljohn Kalakoutis and Jamie Pugh and Graeme L. Close and Georgina M. Ellison and Norman R. Lazarus and Thomas Iskratsch and Stephen D. R. Harridge and Julien Ochala and Matthew J. Stroud}, journal = {The Journal of Physiology}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.1113/jp284128}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings