Scientific Reports (Aug 2022)

RSPO3 is a novel contraction-inducible factor identified in an “in vitro exercise model” using primary human myotubes

  • Tadahisa Takahashi,
  • Yuqing Li,
  • Weijian Chen,
  • Mazvita R. Nyasha,
  • Kazumi Ogawa,
  • Kazuaki Suzuki,
  • Masashi Koide,
  • Yoshihiro Hagiwara,
  • Eiji Itoi,
  • Toshimi Aizawa,
  • Masahiro Tsuchiya,
  • Naoki Suzuki,
  • Masashi Aoki,
  • Makoto Kanzaki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-18190-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract The physiological significance of skeletal muscle as a secretory organ is now well known but we can only speculate as to the existence of as-yet-unidentified myokines, especially those upregulated in response to muscle contractile activity. We first attempted to establish an “insert-chamber based in vitro exercise model” allowing the miniature but high cell-density culture state enabling highly developed contractile human myotubes to be readily obtained by applying electric pulse stimulation (EPS). By employing this in vitro exercise model, we identified R-spondin 3 (RSPO3) as a novel contraction-inducible myokine produced by cultured human myotubes. Contraction-dependent muscular RSPO3 mRNA upregulation was confirmed in skeletal muscles of mice subjected to sciatic nerve mediated in situ contraction as well as those of mice after 2 h of running. Pharmacological in vitro experiments demonstrated a relatively high concentration of metformin (millimolar range) to suppress the contraction-inducible mRNA upregulation of human myokines including RSPO3, interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8 and CXCL1. Our data also suggest human RSPO3 to be a paracrine factor that may positively participate in the myogenesis processes of myoblasts and satellite cells. Thus, the “insert chamber-based in vitro exercise model” is a potentially valuable research tool for investigating contraction-inducible biological responses of human myotubes usually exhibiting poorer contractility development even in the setting of EPS treatment.