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Copyright © 2008, The Rockefeller University Press Article IKK/NF-κB regulates skeletal myogenesis via a signaling switch to inhibit differentiation and promote mitochondrial biogenesis 1Human Cancer Genetics Program, Department of Molecular Virology, Immunology, and Medical Genetics, 2Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology Graduate Program, and 3Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210 4Molecular Medicine Program, Ottawa Health Research Institute, Ottawa K1Y 4E9, Ontario, Canada 5Department of Genetics, Louisiana State University, New Orleans, LA 70112 Correspondence to Denis C. Guttridge: denis.guttridge/at/osumc.edu Received July 26, 2007; Accepted January 29, 2008. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) is involved in multiple skeletal muscle disorders, but how it functions in differentiation remains elusive given that both anti- and promyogenic activities have been described. In this study, we resolve this by showing that myogenesis is controlled by opposing NF-κB signaling pathways. We find that myogenesis is enhanced in MyoD-expressing fibroblasts deficient in classical pathway components RelA/p65, inhibitor of κB kinase β (IKKβ), or IKKγ. Similar increases occur in myoblasts lacking RelA/p65 or IKKβ, and muscles from RelA/p65 or IKKβ mutant mice also contain higher fiber numbers. Moreover, we show that during differentiation, classical NF-κB signaling decreases, whereas the induction of alternative members IKKα, RelB, and p52 occurs late in myogenesis. Myotube formation does not require alternative signaling, but it is important for myotube maintenance in response to metabolic stress. Furthermore, overexpression or knockdown of IKKα regulates mitochondrial content and function, suggesting that alternative signaling stimulates mitochondrial biogenesis. Together, these data reveal a unique IKK/NF-κB signaling switch that functions to both inhibit differentiation and promote myotube homeostasis. Introduction Nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) is a ubiquitously expressed transcription factor and, in mammals, consists of five family members: RelA/p65, c-Rel, RelB, p50 (the processed form of p105), and p52 (the processed form of p100; Hayden and Ghosh, 2004). These subunits contain a DNA-binding protein dimerization domain and nuclear localization signal, but only RelA/p65 (hereafter referred to as p65), c-Rel, and RelB possess transactivation domains (TAs). NF-κB forms homo- and heterodimers, with the p50–p65 complex being the most common. In most cells, NF-κB is bound to IκB inhibitor proteins that mask its nuclear signal and sequester it in the cytoplasm (Huxford et al., 1998). NF-κB is regulated by a variety of factors, such as inflammatory cytokines that direct NF-κB by what is now referred to as the classical pathway (Ghosh and Karin, 2002). This occurs through stimulation of the inhibitor of κB kinase (IKK) complex consisting of two catalytic subunits, IKKα and IKKβ, and a regulatory subunit, IKKγ/NF-κB essential modulator/IKKAP1 (Karin, 1999). Once activated, IKKβ phosphorylates IκB proteins, targeting them for ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation. This releases p50–p65 or p50–c-Rel dimers to translocate to the nucleus and bind DNA, where they induce gene expression. Mice null for IKKβ, IKKγ, or p65 are embryonic lethal as a result of massive liver apoptosis, and cells derived from these embryos are unresponsive to classical NF-κB inducers (Beg et al., 1995b; Tanaka et al., 1999; Rudolph et al., 2000), demonstrating a signaling link between p65, IKKβ, and IKKγ subunits. In response to a second set of factors that include CD40L, B cell–activating factor, and lymphotoxin β, NF-κB is activated through an alternative pathway independent of IKKγ (Pomerantz and Baltimore, 2002). Instead, activation proceeds through the NF-κB–inducing kinase (NIK) that phosphorylates and activates IKKα homodimers and, in turn, phosphorylates p100 in complex with RelB. This leads to ubiquitin-dependent processing of p100 to p52 and translocation of p52–RelB to the nucleus (Senftleben et al., 2001; Xiao et al., 2001). B cell–activating factor, NIK, and p100–p52 knockout mice have similar phenotypes (Gerondakis et al., 1999), confirming that these molecules are also part of the same linear nonclassical signaling cascade. In addition, the classical and alternative pathways are thought to regulate distinct genes in response to their various activators (Dejardin et al., 2002; Bonizzi et al., 2004). Aside from its more commonly accepted role as a regulator of innate immunity and cell survival, NF-κB is also prominent in regulating cellular differentiation. In hematopoietic cells, c-Rel and RelB are essential for B cell lymphopoiesis and T cell maturation (Weih et al., 1996; Gerondakis et al., 1999). NF-κB is also required for osteoclastogenesis, and mice lacking p50 and p52 display severe osteopetrosis (Iotsova et al., 1997). Furthermore, IKKα is important for skin differentiation as well as skeletal and craniofacial morphogenesis (Takeda et al., 1999; Hu et al., 2001; Sil et al., 2004), a function thought to be independent of its kinase activity. Over the past years, an increasing number of studies have also implicated NF-κB in skeletal muscle differentiation, a process regulated by transcription factors MyoD, Myf5, myogenin, MRF4/Myf6/herculin, and MEF2A-D (Naya and Olson, 1999; Sabourin and Rudnicki, 2000; Pownall et al., 2002). These factors regulate myoblasts to undergo growth arrest and fuse into multinucleated myotubes. However, in contrast to hematopoiesis, the function of NF-κB in myogenesis is less defined, and results have conflicted as to whether NF-κB promotes or inhibits this differentiation process. On the one hand, studies demonstrate that NF-κB DNA binding and transcriptional activities decrease during differentiation (Lehtinen et al., 1996; Guttridge et al., 1999) and that inhibition of NF-κB via expression of the IκBα superrepressor (SR) mutant accelerates myogenesis (Guttridge et al., 1999). In addition, activators of NF-κB such as TNFα, IL-1β, or the receptor-interacting protein (RIP) homologue RIP2 act as potent inhibitors of differentiation (Guttridge et al., 2000; Langen et al., 2001; Munz et al., 2002), which together support the notion that NF-κB functions as an inhibitor of myogenesis. NF-κB mediates this regulation through the induction of cyclin D1 (Guttridge et al., 1999) or by suppressing MyoD synthesis through a destabilization element in the MyoD transcript (Guttridge et al., 2000; Sitcheran et al., 2003). More recent data suggest that NF-κB can also inhibit myogenesis by stimulating expression of the Polycomb group protein YY1 (Wang et al., 2007). In contrast, similarly performed studies have reported that NF-κB activity increases during myogenesis in response to insulin-like growth factor (Kaliman et al., 1999; Conejo et al., 2002). Insulin-like growth factor activation is mediated, in part, through the classical pathway, causing IκBα degradation and p65 nuclear translocation, although the alternative pathway also appears to be involved because the overexpression of IKKα or NIK was seen to enhance myogenesis (Canicio et al., 2001). In addition, the expression of IκBα-SR in L6 rat myoblasts was found to inhibit terminal differentiation markers, and recently it was also determined that p38 MAPK-induced myogenesis functions through IL-6 synthesis in an NF-κB–dependent manner (Baeza-Raja and Munoz-Canoves, 2004). Collectively, these studies show that NF-κB function in skeletal muscle differentiation remains at best enigmatic. Resolving this will not only provide insight into the involvement of NF-κB during muscle development and repair but may also increase our understanding of its participation in a growing list of muscle-wasting disorders, including cachexia (Guttridge et al., 2000; Cai et al., 2004; Mourkioti et al., 2006), disuse atrophy (Hunter and Kandarian, 2004), muscular dystrophies (Baghdiguian et al., 1999; Kumar and Boriek, 2003; Acharyya et al., 2007), and inflammatory myopathies (Monici et al., 2003). To this end, we used a genetic approach to decipher the role of NF-κB/IKK subunits during myogenic differentiation. Our results provide an explanation for the previously reported anti- and promyogenic activities of NF-κB by revealing that myogenesis involves both classical and alternative NF-κB pathways. Although constitutive activation of the classical pathway functions in myoblasts to inhibit differentiation, NF-κB signaling switches to the alternative pathway late in the myogenic program to promote mitochondrial biogenesis and myotube homeostasis. Results Myogenic activity is enhanced in p65−/− MEFs expressing MyoD To extend our understanding of NF-κB in skeletal myogenesis, we used established mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) that were wild type or null for individual NF-κB subunits converted to skeletal muscle by exogenous expression of MyoD (Davis et al., 1987). We initiated this analysis with p65 because this subunit is constitutively active in myoblast nuclei (Guttridge et al., 1999). Results showed that myogenic activity derived from a troponin (Tn) I enhancer reporter plasmid (TnI-luc) was significantly enhanced in p65−/− MEFs compared with wild-type cells (Fig. 1 A
MEFs null for p65 are accelerated in their myogenic program To examine how the absence of p65 exerts its effects on the myogenic program, MyoD was stably expressed in p65+/+ and p65−/− MEFs using a murine stem cell virus (MSCV)–MyoD-IRES-GFP retrovirus. After selection, cells were sorted by flow cytometry for GFP to ensure equal levels of MyoD (Fig. 2 A
The transcriptional activity of p65 derives from three TAs located in its C terminus (Schmitz et al., 1994). To determine whether the regulation of myogenesis was dependent on p65 transcriptional activity, reporter assays were repeated in p65−/− MEFs reconstituted with either p65 wild type (1–551 amino acids) or mutants truncated in TA1 (1–521) or all three (1–313) TA domains. Compared with vector, the addition of wild-type p65 (1–551) or TA mutant (1–521) strongly repressed myogenesis, whereas the expression of mutant (1–313) was effective in partially rescuing this regulation (Fig. 2 D Myogenesis is accelerated in p65-deficient myoblasts To determine the physiological relevance of our findings, myogenesis was further explored in p65−/− myoblasts. Although mice lacking p65 are embryonically lethal (Beg et al., 1995b), this phenotype can be rescued with the additional deletion of TNFα (Doi et al., 1999). Thus, TNFα−/−;p65+/− mice were crossed, and primary myoblasts were prepared from 2–4-d-old neonates (Fig. 3 A
The absence of p65 enhances myogenesis in vivo Next, we explored muscles from TNFα−/−;p65−/− mice in an attempt to correlate our in vitro findings with an in vivo phenotype. To our surprise, p65-null muscles displayed a large number of fibers that were noticeably smaller in size than their wild-type counterpart (Fig. 4 A
p65 regulates myogenesis through multiple mechanisms Next, we sought to address the mechanism by which p65 negatively regulates myogenesis. Previous use of the IκBα-SR inhibitor revealed that p65 can inhibit C2C12 differentiation through the suppression of MyoD synthesis (Guttridge et al., 2000). Such analysis also revealed that NF-κB is capable of inhibiting myogenesis through cyclin D1 (Guttridge et al., 1999), limiting myoblasts from exiting the cell cycle or through YY1 to silence myofibrillar promoters in myoblasts (Wang et al., 2007). Consistent with these findings, MyoD was elevated in p65−/− myoblasts, whereas both YY1 and cyclin D1 levels declined (Fig. 5 A
To determine whether these mechanisms could function independently of each other, we examined the regulation of myogenesis by p65 in MyoD−/− myoblasts. Although myotube formation is impaired in these cells (Sabourin et al., 1999), myogenic activity was nevertheless retained under differentiation conditions (Fig. 5 B Myogenesis is regulated by a temporal switch in IKK signaling pathways Having gained insight into the role of p65 in muscle differentiation, we now turned our attention to its upstream regulator, the IKK complex. Recently, our group elucidated that chronic activation of IKKβ in mdx muscles inhibits muscle differentiation (Acharyya et al., 2007). Interestingly, Mourkioti et al. (2006) have also reported that skeletal muscle deletion of IKKβ increased intermediate fiber numbers in 4-mo-old mice, a phenotype that closely matched that of younger p65−/− mice (Fig. 4
To further explore the myogenic functions of IKK, we measured its activity in differentiating myoblasts. Results showed that IKK activation was relatively low in undifferentiated cells but became induced at 48 h into the myogenic program (Fig. 6 E Next, we analyzed endogenous IKK substrates to ascertain which IKK complex became activated during late stage myogenesis. As part of the classical pathway, IKKβ activation results in the phosphorylation of IκBα and p65 (Hayden and Ghosh, 2004). On the other hand, IKKα predominantly phosphorylates p100, leading to its proteolysis and conversion to p52. Results revealed that levels of phosphorylated IκBα and p65 decreased during C2C12 differentiation, whereas total protein levels remained unchanged (Fig. 6 F IKKα functions as a regulator of myotube maintenance under metabolic stress The aforementioned data suggested that components of the alternative pathway might function to promote myogenesis. However, stable expression of an HA-tagged version of IKKα in C2C12 myoblasts did not affect induction of the early and late myogenic markers myogenin and Tn, respectively (Fig. 7 A
However, under long-term differentiation conditions (6 d) without medium replenishment, we observed that myotubes expressing HA-IKKα were better maintained compared with control cells (Fig. 7 C IKKα regulates mitochondrial biogenesis Finally, we attempted to address the process by which IKKα controls myotube maintenance. Because IKKα regulation appeared selectively linked to starvation stress, we speculated that this kinase was involved in regulating the energy capacity of differentiating muscle. Energy production during myogenesis occurs through a switch from glycosidic to oxidative phosphorylation resulting from an increase in mitochondrial content (Moyes et al., 1997; Lyons et al., 2004). Using semiquantitative PCR and the mitochondrial marker gene cytochrome oxidase 1 (MTCO1), we readily detected an increase in mitochondrial DNA during C2C12 myogenesis (Fig. 8 A
To further investigate this regulation, ultrastructural analysis was performed in IKKα overexpression and knockdown conditions. Remarkably, HA-IKKα–expressing myotubes displayed elongated networks of mitochondria, a hallmark of extensive proliferation (Fig. 9 A
Discussion Recent studies have shown that chronic activation of NF-κB is detrimental to muscle function. In skeletal muscles, NF-κB has been linked with disease states such as cachexia and various forms of muscular dystrophies and inflammatory myopathies (Baghdiguian et al., 1999; Kumar and Boriek, 2003; Monici et al., 2003; Hunter and Kandarian, 2004; Acharyya et al., 2007). Although such studies implicate NF-κB as a therapeutic target, mechanistically, relatively little is known about how this transcription factor mediates its pathological effects. Elucidation of these mechanisms might be better achieved by studying NF-κB function in basic models of skeletal myogenesis. However, even in tissue culture systems, reports have conflicted as to whether NF-κB acts as a repressor or promoter of myogenesis (Lehtinen et al., 1996; Guttridge et al., 1999; Kaliman et al., 1999; Canicio et al., 2001; Langen et al., 2001; Conejo et al., 2002; Munz et al., 2002; Baeza-Raja and Munoz-Canoves, 2004). In the present study, we describe what we believe to be a new understanding for the role of NF-κB in skeletal muscle differentiation. Our findings reveal that NF-κB is capable of functioning as both a repressor of differentiation and a promoter of myotube maintenance depending on specific activities of IKK and NF-κB subunits. p65 and the classical NF-κB signaling pathway function as negative regulators of myogenesis Utilization of knockout MEFs demonstrated that myogenic activity was enhanced in cells lacking p65, and comparisons with all five NF-κB subunits showed that this activity was highest in p65−/− cells. Therefore, although myoblast nuclei have been shown to contain constitutive activity for p50 and p65 (Guttridge et al., 1999), our current data argue that suppression of myogenesis by NF-κB is mediated specifically through p65. This notion is consistent with results in primary myoblasts in which myogenic activity was also elevated in p65- but not p50-null cells. Together, these genetic data reaffirm that p65 activity in proliferating myoblasts functions as a negative regulator of myogenesis. This function of p65 is evident in muscle injury, in which the lack of p65 enhances myogenesis in mdx and toxin-treated mice (Acharyya et al., 2007). Given that p65 deficiency correlated with increases in overall fiber numbers in young and adult mice, it suggests that p65 is also relevant during postnatal muscle growth, as indicated by the high levels of NF-κB activity in muscles from neonates (Acharyya et al., 2007). Why p65 would function in this capacity at this stage of development is not yet known, and whether it functions in a similar manner during embryonic or fetal myogenesis remains to be investigated. Our current results demonstrate that regulation of myogenesis is dependent on p65 transcriptional activity. This notion is in line with our previous findings that NF-κB inhibits myogenesis through the transcriptional activation of cyclin D1 (Guttridge et al., 1999). Repression of myogenesis by p65 has also been seen in response to TNFα, leading to the loss of MyoD (Guttridge et al., 2000) and, more recently, to the gain of YY1, resulting in silencing of myofibrillar genes (Wang et al., 2007). Thus, p65 requires its transactivation function to suppress muscle differentiation, and results from MyoD−/− myoblasts support that this can occur via multiple mechanisms. Similar to p65, we discovered that myogenic activity was enhanced in MEFs lacking classical components IKKβ and IKKγ. Like p65, IKKβ deletion in muscle led to increases in fiber number and to enhanced myogenesis, as recently reported in mdx mice (Acharyya et al., 2007). Collectively, these data argue strongly that classical NF-κB signaling functions as a negative regulator of muscle differentiation in both physiological and disease processes. IKKα signaling promotes myotube maintenance through mitochondrial biogenesis With respect to alternative NF-κB signaling, our results showed that activation of IKK during myogenesis is selective to IKKα, as this activity tightly correlated with p100 processing. Such activation was preceded by a decline in classical pathway activity, which is depicted by decreases in IκBα and p65 phosphorylation, as well as p65 nuclear and DNA-bound levels. In contrast to recent findings that nuclear localization of IKKα is required in skin differentiation (Hu et al., 2001; Sil et al., 2004) or NF-κB–dependent gene expression (Anest et al., 2003; Yamamoto et al., 2003; Hoberg et al., 2004), we were unable to detect nuclear IKKα in myoblasts or myotubes (unpublished data). Although our current results do not rule out the possibility that IKKα might still phosphorylate an unknown target to modulate myogenic gene expression, we favor instead that IKKα function in skeletal muscle differentiation is represented by the alternative pathway requiring the cytoplasmic form of IKKα to activate p52–RelB complexes. Evidence from IKKα−/−, p52−/−, and RelB−/− MEFs indicated that alternative activation of NF-κB is required for myogenic activity. These results appear consistent with previous findings implicating IKKα as a positive regulator of myogenesis (Canicio et al., 2001). However, in contrast to these findings, we were unable to demonstrate by either forced expression or RNAi depletion that IKKα is essential for the induction of myogenic genes or myotube formation. Although genetic evidence from p65 and IKKβ knockout MEFs was consistent with how these classical signaling components were found to function in muscle cells, we do not yet understand why this same consistency was not present between IKKα−/− MEFs and C2C12 cells depleted of IKKα with siRNA. Possibly, the fraction of IKKα that remains in cells after siRNA depletion is sufficient to mask a phenotype that otherwise requires its complete absence, or perhaps the increase in myogenic activity derived from established IKKα−/− MEFs might be an indirect consequence of immortalization and continued subculturing. We suspect that additional myogenic reporter assays in primary IKKα−/− MEFs and myoblasts will be needed to clarify this issue. Nevertheless, our observations led to the novel discovery that IKKα acts as a regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis. Although the mechanism remains unknown, we predict that IKKα activation functions through p52–RelB to promote mitochondrial biogenesis and meet the metabolic needs of newly formed contractile myotubes. The inhibitor compounds of mitochondria were also seen to decrease myotube maintenance, suggesting that IKKα regulation of mitochondria is necessary for myotube homeostasis in response to changing metabolic conditions. A model for IKK/NF-κB signaling in skeletal muscle differentiation Collectively, our data support a model whereby IKK/NF-κB signaling both inhibits and promotes the differentiation state of muscle cells (Fig. 10
Materials and methods Materials Antibodies to p100–p52, IκBα (C21), IKKβ, IKKγ (FL419), myogenin (M-225), p38, MyoD (M-318), and p65 (N terminal) were obtained from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc. MyHCIIB (MY-32), MyHC slow (NOQ7.5.4D), Tn T (JLT-12), sarcomeric tropomyosin (CH1), and α-sarcomeric actin (5C5) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. p65 antibody was obtained from Rockland Immunochemicals, Inc., HA was purchased from Covance, and IKKα was purchased from Imgenex. Phospho-IκBα, p38, and p65 were obtained from Cell Signaling Technology, and cytochrome c was purchased from BD Biosciences. Bovine insulin, collagen type I, and gelatin were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich, whereas TNFα was purchased from Roche. Both collagenase P and dispase (grade II) were obtained from Boehringer Mannheim. Basic human FGF was purchased from Promega, and oligomycin was obtained from Alexis Biochemicals. MitoTracker green and secondary antibodies for immunofluorescence were obtained from Invitrogen, whereas other materials for immunohistochemical analysis were obtained from Vector Laboratories. Plasmids Reporter and p65 expression plasmids were previously described (Guttridge et al., 1999; Acharyya et al., 2004; Hertlein et al., 2005) with the exception of the p65(1–313; S276A) mutant, which was generated by mutating serine 276 to alanine in the p65(1–313) plasmid. MSCV-MyoD was generated by subcloning the MyoD cDNA from a pBabepuroMyoD retroviral construct (Guttridge et al., 2000). IKK plasmids were designed by subcloning IKKα, IKKβ, and IKKγ into the pBSx-HSAvpA plasmid, whereby transgene expression is driven from the human skeletal actin promoter. Transfections, luciferase assays, and retrovirus infections Subconfluent C2C12 cells were transfected in low serum Opti-MEM using Lipofectamine (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer. For luciferase assays, cells were transiently transfected using Superfect (QIAGEN) for MEFs or Lipofectamine for primary myoblasts. All transfections were normalized to cytomegalovirus-βGal expression. Cells were lysed in mammalian protein extraction reagent solution (Thermo Fisher Scientific), and assays were performed as previously reported (Guttridge et al., 1999). IKKα, IKKβ, and p65 siRNAs were obtained from Dharmacon, Inc., and transfections were performed using Lipofectamine 2000. Retrovirus production and infection were performed as previously described (Guttridge et al., 1999). Mice and genotyping Animals were housed in the animal facility at The Ohio State University Heart and Lung Research Institute under sterile conditions maintaining constant temperature and humidity and were fed a standard diet. Treatment of mice was in accordance with the institutional guidelines of the Animal Care and Use Committee. Mice null for p65 were generated as previously described (Doi et al., 1999). p50 mice were obtained from Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, and IKKβ flox mice (Li et al., 2003) were crossed to muscle creatine kinase–Cre mice to delete IKKβ in skeletal muscle. Mice genotypes were confirmed by PCR analysis from prepared tail DNA. Cell culture C2C12 murine myoblasts and fibroblasts were cultured as previously described (Guttridge et al., 2000). Primary myoblasts were prepared from 2-d-old neonates adopted from the described procedures (Rando and Blau, 1994). In brief, limbs from pups were skinned and incubated with collagenase/dispase mixture at 37°C for 1 h. Then, the cell suspension was further homogenized by pipetting and preplated on uncoated cell culture plates in F10 media (Invitrogen) to selectively enrich for myoblasts. After two rounds of preplating, the cell suspension was plated on gelatin-precoated plates in the presence of 20% FBS and 6 ng/ml basic FGF. Primary myoblasts were used at passage 3–5 after isolation. Immunoblotting, Northern blots, ChIP, and kinase assays Western and Northern blots and kinase analyses were performed as described previously (Hertlein et al., 2005). For ChIP, assays were performed as recommended by the manufacturer (Millipore). Histology, electron microscopy, and immunofluorescence For muscle analysis, tissues were sectioned at 10 μm on a cryostat (Leica) and stained with hematoxylin and eosin or processed for immunohistochemistry. The internal diameters (shortest diameter) from 1,200 fibers in random fields throughout the muscle were recorded using a microscope (BX50; Olympus) and MetaVue 6.2r6 software (MDS Analytical Technologies). Fiber number was recorded in 25 randomly selected fields throughout the muscle and averaged for comparisons. Muscles from three to five different animals per group were used. Immunostaining procedures on cell lines and muscle sections were performed as described previously (Acharyya et al., 2004, 2005), and all images were captured with a fluorescent microscope (Axioskop 40; Carl Zeiss, Inc.) using a camera (AxioCam HRc; Carl Zeiss, Inc.) and AxioVision 3.1 software (Carl Zeiss, Inc.). Ultrastructural analysis was performed on fixed cells and sectioned using a microtome (EM UC6; Leica) at 70 nm. Sections were then stained and visualized using a transmission electron microscope (Spirit Tecnai; FEI) at 80 kV, and images were captured with a camera (XR60; Advanced Microscopy Techniques). Mitochondrial assays Both CellTiter-Glo Luminescent Assay for ATP determination and MTS cell viability assays were obtained from Promega and performed according to the manufacturer's recommendations. Citrate synthase activity was determined by using Ellman's reagent with acetyl-CoA and oxaloacetate (Leek et al., 2001). Procedures for primer design and PCR of MTCO1 as well as mitochondrial extraction for identification of cytochrome c were followed as described previously (Huo and Scarpulla, 2001; Liu et al., 2004). Statistical analysis All quantitative data are represented as means ± SEM. Analysis was performed between different groups using a two-tailed t test. Statistical significance was set at P < 0.05. Online supplemental material Fig. S1 shows that the absence of p65 in young mice leads to increases in fiber numbers that is independent of fiber type and muscle atrophy. Fig. S2 shows evidence for the conditional deletion of IKKβ in primary fibroblasts and adult muscles. Fig. S3 shows that the NF-κB classical pathway inhibits myogenesis in 10T1/2 fibroblasts, whereas C2C12 myotubes are not maintained with compounds that inhibit mitochondria. Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200707179/DC1. Acknowledgments We thank U. Siebenlist and F. Weih for MEF knockout cell lines, A. Beg, M. Karin, and R. Kahn for mice, J. Didonato for expression plasmids, J. Rafael-Fortney for advice, and K. Wolken at The Ohio State University Campus Microscopy Core for assistance with EM analysis. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants CA098466 and AR052787. Notes Abbreviations used in this paper: ChIP, chromatin immunoprecipitation; DM, differentiation medium; GM, growth medium; IKK, inhibitor of κB kinase; MEF, mouse embryonic fibroblast; MSCV, murine stem cell virus; MyHC, myosin heavy chain; NF-κB, nuclear factor κB; NIK, NF-κB–inducing kinase; Rb, retinoblastoma; SR, superrepressor; TA, transactivation domain; Tn, troponin. References
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