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Neppl, Ronald

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Neppl

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Ronald

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Neppl, Ronald

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Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication

    The Histone Methyltransferase Set7/9 Promotes Myoblast Differentiation and Myofibril Assembly

    (The Rockefeller University Press, 2011) Tao, Yazhong; Neppl, Ronald; Huang, Zhan-Peng; Chen, Jianfu; Tang, Ru-Hang; Cao, Ru; Zhang, Yi; Jin, Suk-Won; Wang, Da-Zhi

    The molecular events that modulate chromatin structure during skeletal muscle differentiation are still poorly understood. We report in this paper that expression of the H3-K4 histone methyltransferase Set7 is increased when myoblasts differentiate into myotubes and is required for skeletal muscle development, expression of muscle contractile proteins, and myofibril assembly. Knockdown of Set7 or expression of a dominant-negative Set7 mutant impairs skeletal muscle differentiation, accompanied by a decrease in levels of histone monomethylation (H3-K4me1). Set7 directly interacts with MyoD to enhance expression of muscle differentiation genes. Expression of myocyte enhancer factor 2 and genes encoding contractile proteins is decreased in Set7 knockdown myocytes. Furthermore, we demonstrate that Set7 also activates muscle gene expression by precluding Suv39h1-mediated H3-K9 methylation on the promoters of myogenic differentiation genes. Together, our experiments define a biological function for Set7 in muscle differentiation and provide a molecular mechanism by which Set7 modulates myogenic transcription factors during muscle differentiation.

  • Publication

    lncRNA Chronos is an aging-induced inhibitor of muscle hypertrophy

    (The Rockefeller University Press, 2017) Neppl, Ronald; Wu, Chia-Ling; Walsh, Kenneth

    Skeletal muscle exhibits remarkable plasticity in its ability to modulate its mass in response to the physiologic changes associated with functional use, systemic disease, and aging. Although a gradual loss of muscle mass normally occurs with advancing age, its increasingly rapid progression results in sarcopenia in a subset of individuals. The identities of muscle-enriched, long noncoding RNAs that regulate this process are unknown. Here, we identify a long noncoding RNA, named Chronos, whose expression in muscle is positively regulated with advancing age and negatively regulated during Akt1-mediated growth. Inhibition of Chronos induces myofiber hypertrophy both in vitro and in vivo, in part, through the epigenetic modulation of Bmp7 signaling.