ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Nutr., 12 March 2018

Sec. Nutrigenomics

Volume 5 - 2018 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2018.00015

Effect of Eicosapentaenoic Acid and Docosahexaenoic Acid on Myogenesis and Mitochondrial Biosynthesis during Murine Skeletal Muscle Cell Differentiation

    TH

    Tun-Yun Hsueh 1

    JI

    Jamie I. Baum 2

    YH

    Yan Huang 1*

  • 1. Department of Animal Science, Division of Agriculture, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, United States

  • 2. Department of Food Science, Division of Agriculture, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, United States

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Abstract

Polyunsaturated fatty acids are important nutrients for human health, especially omega-3 fatty acids such as eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), which have been found to play positive roles in the prevention of various diseases. However, previous studies have reported that excessive omega-3 fatty acids supplement during pregnancy caused side effects such as slower neural transmission times and postnatal growth restriction. In this study, we investigated the effect of EPA and DHA on mitochondrial function and gene expression in C2C12 myoblasts during skeletal muscle differentiation. C2C12 myoblasts were cultured to confluency and then treated with differentiation medium that contained fatty acids (50-µM EPA and DHA). After 72 h of myogenic differentiation, mRNA was collected, and gene expression was analyzed by real-time PCR. Microscopy was used to examine cell morphology following treatment with fatty acids. The effect of EPA and DHA on cellular oxygen consumption was measured using a Seahorse XF24 Analyzer. Cells treated with fatty acids had fewer myotubes formed (P ≤ 0.05) compared with control cells. The expression of the genes related to myogenesis was significantly lower (P ≤ 0.05) in cells treated with fatty acids, compared with control cells. Genes associated with adipogenesis had higher (P ≤ 0.05) expression after treatment with fatty acids. Also, the mitochondrial biogenesis decreased with lower (P ≤ 0.05) gene expression and lower (P ≤ 0.05) mtDNA/nDNA ratio in cells treated with fatty acids compared with control cells. However, the expression of genes related to peroxisome biosynthesis was higher (P ≤ 0.05) in cells treated with fatty acids. Moreover, fatty-acid treatment reduced (P ≤ 0.05) oxygen consumption rate under oligomycin-inhibited (reflecting proton leak) and uncoupled conditions. Our data imply that fatty acids might reduce myogenesis and increase adipogenesis in myotube formation. Fatty acids may also decrease cell metabolism by reducing mitochondrial biogenesis as well as respiration rate. This study suggests that the maternal overdosage of EPA and DHA may influence fetal muscle development, increase intramuscular adipose tissue deposition in offspring, and have a long-term effect on the development of metabolic diseases such as obesity and diabetes in adult offspring.

Introduction

The polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), especially n − 3 fatty acids such as eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, 20:5, n − 3) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6, n − 3), mainly derived from fish oil and seaweed, phytoplankton, and camelina (1), have been found to play positive roles in human health (2). A series of studies have shown the efficient function of EPA and DHA in preventing body overweight and obesity (36). n − 3 fatty acids are widely considered as a dietary supplement during pregnancy, because of the benefit to fetal neurodevelopment and infant birth weight (7). Although, overdosage of EPA and DHA is rare, it was reported that adverse effects such as the risk of bruising or bleeding caused by high intake of EPA and DHA in extreme circumstances (anticoagulants and antiplatelets treatments) were observed in several controlled human intervention studies (8). Clinical research showed that EPA and DHA supplementation during pregnancy accumulates in fetal tissues and causes a longer gestation (9). However, no study has addressed the question whether high intake of EPA and DHA affects fetal muscle development during gestation.

Skeletal muscle composes 40–50% or body weight and is an essential organ for glucose and fatty-acid utilization (10). Fetal stage is crucial for skeletal muscle development because of the limited increase in muscle fiber number after birth (11). During fetal muscle development, mesenchymal stem cells undergo myogenesis, adipogenesis, and fibrogenesis. The muscle growth in the postnatal stages occurs mainly due to the increase of the diameter and length of muscle fibers instead of muscle fiber (muscle cell) numbers. This indicates that muscle stem cells can be utilized as an in vitro model to study the muscle growth and development during the fetal stage. Comparing with central neuro system and cardiovascular tissue, skeletal muscle has a relatively lower priority of nutrition repartitioning which makes the development of skeletal muscle especially vulnerable to nutritional change (12). Studies in a sheep model indicated that maternal obesity induced by high-energy diet showed downregulation effect on fetal myogenesis and impaired skeletal muscle development in offspring, but increased number and size of intramuscular adipocytes in the fetus at mid- and late-gestation (1316). Due to the metabolic importance, fetal skeletal muscle is considered as one of the target organs of lipid accumulation that induced by a high-fat or high-carbohydrate maternal diet (17, 18). It raises up a question whether a high-energy maternal diet rich in PUFAs similarly affects fetal muscle cell differentiation and adipose deposition during gestation.

In most eukaryotes, mitochondria are primary organelles that response for energy metabolism which derived from the breakdown of carbohydrates and fatty acids. It was reported that the n − 3 PUFAs could cause higher oxidation levels of mitochondrial fatty acids in the myocardium (1922). EPA and DHA individually increase mitochondrial biosynthesis in skeletal muscle stem cells (2325). Therefore, we hypothesize that EPA and DHA treatment on myofibroblasts (C2C12 cells) may affect the myogenesis and adipogenesis via metabolic changes in mitochondria.

The objective of the current study was to measure the effect of maternal EPA and DHA supplement on myotube formation and potential pathways related to adipose deposition and mitochondrial biosynthesis using myofibroblasts as in vitro model.

Materials and Methods

Cell Culture

Murine C2C12 myoblasts (cells were kindly donated by Dr. Jamie Baum from University of Arkansas) were cultured in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (DMEM) with 10% fetal bovine serum and 1U penicillin-streptomycin at 37°C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere. When cells confluency reached more than 90%, control group (CON) was induced to fuse and form myotubes by switching to the differentiation medium (DM) containing 2% horse serum and 1U penicillin-streptomycin, while 50-µM EPA and 50-µM DHA were added to DM in the fatty-acid treatment group (FA). DM with or without fatty acids was changed every 24 h for 3 days.

Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) Staining

Myotube formation is the direct observation of myogenesis. Myotube formation was observed by conducting H&E staining as described previously (26). Briefly, cells in 6-well plates (three for CON group and three for FA group) were fixed with ice-cold 100% ethanol, then froze in −20°C for 7 min. Hematoxylin stain was added to each well and stained for 5 min. Cells were rinsed with running tap water. Eosin stain was added in wells and stained for 30 s. Cells were rinsed with running tap water and rinse with phosphate-buffered saline. Cells were dried at room temperature before coverslips were mounted on the cells. Pictures were taken under a microscope (Nikon Eclipse Ts2R, Nikon, Melville, NY, USA) with the camera (Nikon DS-Fi3 digital camera system) and software (NIS-Elements BR, Nikon, Melville, NY, USA). Three pictures were randomly taken from each well, and total nine pictures for each group were analyzed for the myotube formation. The diameter and number of myotubes were measured using ImageJ software (US National Institutes of Health).

Real-Time PCR

Gene expression related to myogenesis, adipogenesis, mitochondrial biosynthesis, and peroxisome biosynthesis were measured by quantitative real-time PCR. Total RNA was extracted from cells with the TRIzol reagent (Fisher, Pittsburgh, PA, USA). The concentration of total RNA was assessed by Nanodrop OneC (Thermo Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA), and quality was examined in the absorption ratio of OD260 nm/OD280 nm. The cDNA was synthesized from the RNA with iScript cDNA synthesis kit (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA, USA). Real-time PCR was carried out by using SYBR Green Supermix (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA, USA) on CFX Connect Real-Time PCR Detection System (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA, USA). The oligonucleotide primers (Table 1) used were designed with NCBI database and Primer Quest (IDT.com). Each reaction yielded amplicons from 80 to 200 bp. PCR conditions were as follows: 30 s at 95°C, 30 s at 55°C, and 40 s at 72°C for 40 cycles. After amplification, a melting curve (0.01°C/s) was used to confirm product purity, and the PCR products were electrophoresed to confirm the targeted sizes. Results are expressed relative to β-actin. Data were analyzed using the ΔΔCT method and β-actin gene was the reference gene.

Table 1

PrimersAccession no.Forward sequenceReverse sequence
MyoDNM_010866TCTGGAGCCCTCCTGGCACCCGGGAAGGGGGAGAGTGGGG
MyoGNM_031189GCAATGCACTGGAGTTCGACGATGGACGTAAGGGAGTG
MRF4NM_008657GTGGACCCCTACAGCTACAAACCTGGAAGAAAGGCGCTGAAGAC
Pax7NM_011039CTCAGTGAGTTCGATTAGCCGAGACGGTTCCCTTTGTCGC
PMP70NM_008991AAGAATGGCGATGGCAAGACTTGTGAAACGGTAAAGAGGGTGAT
Pex2NM_008994TGAAGGAACCACTTAGAAATTACAGACCAGGGCCTTATTCAGTTCA
Pex19NM_023041CAGAGTGAGATGTGTTAGGAGATGGTGCCAAGGAGACGAAGAC
ERRaNM_007953GGTGTGGCATCCTGTGAGGCAGGCACTTGGTGAAGCGGCA
TFAMNM_009360GCTTGGAAAACCAAAAAGACCCCAAGACTTCATTTCATT
PGC1aNM_008904TCCTCTGACCCCAGAGTCACCTTGGTTGGCTTTATGAGGAGG
aP2NM_024406CGACAGGAAGGTGAAGAGCATCATACATAAACTCTTGTGGAAGTCACGCCT
C/EBPaNM_007678GCAAGCCAGGACTAGGAGATAATACTAGTACTGCCGGGCC
C/EBPbNM_001287738AAGCTGAGCGACGAGTACAAGATGTTGAACAAGTTCCGCAGGGTGCT
PPARgNM_001127330GATGTCTCACAATGCCATCAGTCAGCAGACTCTGGGTTCAG
CPT1NM_009948TATAACAGGTGGTTTGACACAGAGGTGCCCAATGATG
FATNM_001159558CTCCTAGTAGGCGTGGGTCTCACGGGGTCTCAACCATTCA
Rpl7NM_011291GAAGCTCATCTATGAGAAGGCAAGACGAAGGAGCTGCAGAAC
β-actinNM_007393AAATCGTGCGTGACATCAAAAAGGAAGGCTGGAAAAGAGC
mtDNA(Ttll3)NM_133923CGATAAACCCCGCTCTACCTAGCCCATTTCTTCCCATTTC
nDNA (27)CCTTGGGTCCTTGGCTTCGTTCCTCTCAGCAATCAGCCGTCCAATTCCTA

List of primers.

Oxygen Consumption Measurement

Mitochondrial activities and metabolic levels can be determined by conducting oxygen consumption measurement. Oxygen consumption rate (OCR) of C2C12 cells was measured in real time using a Seahorse XF24 extracellular flux analyzer (Seahorse Bioscience, North Billerica, MA, USA) (28). C2C12 cells were seeded at 3 × 104 per well in 24-well XF plates. DM with or without EPA and DHA was then used to culture cells for 72 h once cells reached confluence. The cells were refreshed with non-buffered pH7.4 medium (25-mM glucose) and incubated for 1 h in a non-CO2 incubator. A Seahorse XF24 Analyzer was then used to measure the OCR.

Statistical Analyses

Differences between groups were assessed for significance by the unpaired Student’s t-test with the assumption of equal variances, and arithmetic means ± SEM are reported. Statistical significance was considered as P ≤ 0.05.

Results

Myotube Formation in CON and FA Groups

After induced differentiation, rod-shaped C2C12 myoblasts fused and elongated to develop into nascent myotubes. Fewer myotubes with smaller diameter were observed histochemically in FA group than in CON group (Figures 1A–F). The average diameter of myotubes in FA group was 38.10 ± 3.33% lower (P < 0.05) than in CON group. The total myotube number in the field in FA group was 32.73 ± 16.07% lower (P < 0.05) than in CON group (Figure 1G).

Figure 1

Figure 1

Myotube formation of C2C12 cells in control (CON) and EPA/DHA (FA) medium. (A–F) H&E staining of C2C12 cells. Pictures are shown in different magnification: 100× and 200×. (G) The diameter and length of myotubes measured based on the H&E staining images. Data show the change of the diameter and numbers of myotubes in FA group compared with CON group. The relative changes were calculated in arbitrary units. *P < 0.05; n = 9 pictures for each group.

mRNA Expression of Genes Affected by FA Treatment

To determine the effect of EPA and DHA media supplement on the growth of the cells, we conducted qPCR targeted on the genes related to myogenesis, adipogenesis, mitochondrial biogenesis, and peroxisome biogenesis. Most of the myogenesis-related genes were downregulated by FA treatment (Figure 2). The expressions of MRF4, MyoD, and MyoG were all decreased (44.61 ± 3.66, 30.12 ± 8.07, and 46.25 ± 1.83%, respectively, P < 0.05) in FA treatment group compared with CON group. Pax7 was tended to be suppressed by FA treatment (60.31 ± 20.93%, P = 0.09) compared with CON group.

Figure 2

Figure 2

The relative gene expression related to myogenesis of C2C12 cells in control (CON) and EPA/DHA (FA) medium. Data show the change of their mRNA expression in FA group compared with CON group. The relative expressions were calculated in arbitrary units. *P < 0.05 and &P < 0.1; n = 3.

The mRNA expression of genes related to adipogenesis in C2C12 cells was increased in FA group (Figure 3). aP2 expression in FA group is 17.76 ± 0.80 times (P < 0.05) of the expression in CON group. The expressions of c/EBPα, c/EBPb, PPARγ, CPT1b, and FAT were all higher (70.08 ± 1.04, 21.84 ± 5.35, 34.06 ± 11.33, 108.82 ± 17.47, and 9.40 ± 5.42%, respectively, P < 0.05) in FA treatment group than in CON group.

Figure 3

Figure 3

The relative gene expression related to adipogenesis of C2C12 cells in control (CON) and EPA/DHA (FA) medium. Data show the change of their mRNA expression in FA group compared with CON group. The relative expressions were calculated in arbitrary units. *P < 0.05; n = 3.

FA supplement suppressed gene related to mitochondrial function and biogenesis (Figure 4). The mRNA expression of ERRα (estrogen-related receptor alpha), TFAM (mitochondrial transcription factor A), and PGC1α (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1 alpha) were downregulated (25.63 ± 7.10, 22.87 ± 3.64, and 31.33 ± 8.62%, respectively, P < 0.05) by FA compared with CON group. Mfn2 (mitofusin 2) was tended to be decreased (6.61 ± 3.64%, P = 0.09) in FA group compared with CON group. The ratio of mtDNA to nDNA was significantly lower (38.07 ± 9.68%, P < 0.05) in FA-treated cells than in the CON cells.

Figure 4

Figure 4

The relative gene expression related to mitochondrial biogenesis and function of C2C12 cells in control (CON) and EPA/DHA (FA) medium. Data show the change of their mRNA expression in FA group compared with CON group. The relative expressions were calculated in arbitrary units. *P < 0.05 and &P < 0.1; n = 3.

Genes related to peroxisome biogenesis are also affected by FA treatment (Figure 5). PMP70 and Pex2 were significantly upregulated (43.27 ± 9.97 and 64.20 ± 15.97%, P < 0.05) by FA, and Pex19 was tended to be promoted (33.89 ± 16.94%, P = 0.06) by FA. However, Pex11a and Pex5 were lower significantly and non-significantly (23.37 ± 0.4%, P < 0.05 and 21.22 ± 12.53%, P = 0.09, respectively).

Figure 5

Figure 5

The mRNA expression of the genes related to peroxisome biogenesis of C2C12 cells in control (CON) and EPA/DHA (FA) medium. Data show the change of their mRNA expression in FA group compared with CON group. The relative expressions were calculated in arbitrary units. *P < 0.05 and &P < 0.1; n = 3.

Oxygen Consumption Rate

To confirm whether the metabolism of the cells was affected by FA treatment through changed gene expression related to mitochondria and peroxisome, we measured the oxygen consumption in Seahorse system and calculated the OCR in the two groups normalized to cell number. Results showed that the maximum oxygen consumption capacity stimulated by 350-nM FCCP and inhibited by 10-µM antimycin was significantly decreased (17.79 ± 2.67%, P < 0.05) by FA treatment compared with CON group with no FA in the DM (Figure 6).

Figure 6

Figure 6

Metabolic profiling of C2C12 cells in in control (CON) and EPA/DHA (FA) medium. (A) Total oxygen consumption (reserve capacity) is significantly lower in FA group. Data show the change of oxygen consumption rates (OCR) in FA group compared with CON group. The relative change was calculated in arbitrary units. (B) Basal and stimulated mitochondrial OCR in cultured C2C12 cells. OCR traces are expressed as pmol O2 per min in C2C12 cells and normalized to cell number. Vertical dashed lines indicate the times of addition of oligomycin (2 µM), FCCP (350 nM), and antimycin A (10 µM). *P < 0.05; n = 11.

Discussion

Long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LCPUFAs) pass through the human placenta and can be delivered to the fetus (17, 29). Moreover, they are present in the breast milk to affect postnatal growth and development (30). Imbalance in PUFA intake, including maternal malnutrition or overnutrition, during fetal development, changes the fatty-acid deposition in the cell membrane as phospholipids and causes implication for cell structure and function (17). Insufficient maternal nutrient intake has been widely studied. The lower level of maternal n − 3 fatty acids is related to higher body and abdominal fat mass in childhood (31). On the other hand, maternal obesity, overeating, and overnutrition also increase the risk of metabolic disorders in the fetus and subsequently induce postnatal obesity (32, 33). It was reported that excessive n − 3 fatty-acid intake resulted in growth deficiencies such as slower neural transmission times and postnatal growth restriction (34). Animal growth is contributed to bone formation, muscle building, and fat tissue deposition. During later gestation and early postnatal stage, muscle and adipose tissue growth are highly affected by maternal nutrition level. This study tried to discover the effect of n − 3 fatty acids on the myoblasts growth in gene expression level. Based on previous studies of EPA and DHA in cell culture study, EPA and DHA are toxic for C2C12 cells when the concentration is >50 µM (35). Therefore, 50 µM was selected in the current study for EPA and DHA as a high concentration without apparent toxicity to C2C12 cells.

During myogenic differentiation, we found that several vital myogenic genes were significantly downregulated in FA-treated group, such as MRF4, MyoD, and MyoG. MRF4, also known as myogenic factor 6 (MYF6), plays a role the in myotube maturation. MyoD and MyoG, as well as MRF4, belong to myogenic regulatory factors, but their functions are slightly different. MyoD is one of the earliest myogenic markers. MyoG is a crucial gene that regulates the secondary muscle fibers maturation (36). Pax 7 is critical for regulating the differentiation of satellite cells (37). Once myoblasts start myogenic differentiation, Pax7 usually does not express. In our study, the Pax7 expression was lower in FA group, although the average decreasing was >60%, the variation of the response is enormous, which indicated the initiation of myogenic differentiation induced by FA was not constant. The results of this study showed that the PUFA treatment inhibits myotube formation and eventually arrests the development of myofibers. These adverse effects were confirmed later in H&E staining by showing fewer and smaller myotubes formed in FA group. However, previous study showed that EPA alone promotes skeletal muscle protein accretion with the L-leucine supplement, but not DHA (38). Leucine is one of the branched-chain amino acids that are highly effective to accelerate skeletal muscle protein synthesis. It may have additional effect on EPA to elevate muscle growth. Our results may indicate that without L-leucine, the effect of EPA on muscle growth might be negative. Also, our data showed that the combination of EPA and DHA might be antagonistic to muscle growth.

Most of the essential genes related to adipogenesis, such as aP2, C/EBPα, C/EBPb, PPARγ, CPT1b, and FAT, were upregulated in FA group. aP2 is also called fatty-acid binding protein 4, for its function of carrying protein for fatty acids to regulate lipid metabolism and mostly expressed in adipocytes. In this study, aP2 gene expression was dramatically stimulated by EPA and DHA treatment, which was 1,700% of the expression in CON group. n − 3 fatty acids usually have a high degree of unsaturation, result into the quickly processed fatty-acid oxidation, and stimulate PPARs (39). PPAR isoforms participate in lipid homeostasis and glucose regulation. PPARs target the specific genes, for example, aP2, which contain specific DNA regions called peroxisome proliferator hormone response elements (40). Fatty infiltration in skeletal muscle is accompanying with aging in human (41). These results showed that potentially upregulated adipogenesis in C2C12 cell culture could be triggered by EPA and DHA treatment. Our findings were consisted with an in vivo study, which showed upregulated adipogenesis in pig suppled with DHA (42). The upregulated adipogenesis and the decreased myogenic gene expression may indicate that overdosing EPA and DHA is associated with muscle aging. CEBPs are critical for the regulation of genes related to immune and inflammatory responses. However, IL-6 and TNF-a gene expressions are similar between CON and FA group.

As the “powerhouse” of the cell, mitochondria break fuel molecules and provide energy to the cell in the formation of ATP. The mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation system is considered as the primary source for energy production, which relies on the structure of mitochondrial inner membrane (43). PGC1 family is a group of transcriptional coactivators regulates cellular energy metabolic pathways and mitochondrial biosynthesis (44, 45). ERRα and its down-streaming target gene Mfn2 are key genes that regulate mitochondrial fusion and metabolism (46). TFAM is an essential activator of mitochondrial genome replication. The mRNA expression data of this study showed that PUFA supplement in DM during myogenesis inhibits the expression of the key genes of mitochondrial metabolism and biosynthesis. The decreasing of the mitochondrial biosynthesis was confirmed by measuring the ratio of mtDNA/nDNA. The ratio of mtDNA/nDNA is often used an estimate for the mtDNA copy number per cell (47). It is a high-level indicator if mitochondrial biogenesis as the mitochondrial genome encodes most of the enzymatic subunits of the oxidative phosphorylation system. The decreased mitochondrial metabolism was supported by testing the respiration of the cells, which showed the PUFA-treated cells consumed less oxygen which indicated less-mitochondrial metabolism. Harmed mitochondrial dynamics and biosynthesis negatively affect the regulation of energy expenditure which leads to obesity and diabetes (48), which implies that overdosing EPA and DHA during gestation may have a long-term effect on offspring metabolic disorder.

Peroxisomes are found of playing a significant role in breaking down very long chain fatty acid [greater than C22, such as DHA which is 22:6 (n = 3)] through beta-oxidation, but is not coupled to ATP synthesis (49). Peroxisomal membrane proteins (PMPs), which are encoded by peroxisomal biogenesis genes (PEXs), are involved in peroxisome biogenesis (50). Among them, PMP70 and Pex19 are considered as the critical proteins in peroxisomal proliferation and biogenesis (51, 52). The altered expression of PEXs in this study indicated that PUFAs affect peroxisomal biogenesis. The high-potential electrons produced by beta-oxidation in peroxisomes are transferred to yield H2O2, which generates heat and contributes to the accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The mitochondrial antioxidant system removes ROS production and inhibits ROS production. The lower metabolism of mitochondria induced by EPA and DHA may enhance the oxidative stress in myoblasts differentiation and cause structural and functional muscle abnormalities (53). This may be an explanation of downregulated myogenic gene expression and smaller and fewer myotube formation.

Conclusion

This study demonstrated the effects of EPA and DHA supplement in C2C12 myogenic differentiation. The key gene expression in myogenesis, adipogenesis, mitochondrial, and peroxisomal biosynthesis in C2C12 cells during myogenic differentiation is affected by EPA and DHA. The myotube formation is inhibited while PUFA treatment upregulates adipogenic gene expression. Strengthened peroxisomal biosynthesis and weakened mitochondrial metabolism and biosynthesis imply that the overdosed PUFAs change energy expenditure, and may cause ROS stress that negatively regulates myogenesis. These indicate that the maternal overdosage of EPA and DHA may influence fetal muscle development, increase intramuscular adipose tissue deposition in offspring, and have a long-term effect on the development of metabolic disease such as obesity and diabetes in adult offspring.

Statements

Author contributions

YH, T-YH, and JB conceived and designed the experiments. YH and T-YH performed the experiments and analyzed the data. YH wrote the manuscript.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Hatch project Accession No.: 1010063. We thank Dr. Walter Bottje for providing Seahorse XF24 extracellular flux analyzer and the training.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The handling editor declared a shared affiliation, though no other collaboration with the authors.

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Summary

Keywords

eicosapentaenoic acid and docosahexaenoic acid, mitochondria, maternal nutrition, C2C12 myoblasts, muscle growth and development

Citation

Hsueh T-Y, Baum JI and Huang Y (2018) Effect of Eicosapentaenoic Acid and Docosahexaenoic Acid on Myogenesis and Mitochondrial Biosynthesis during Murine Skeletal Muscle Cell Differentiation. Front. Nutr. 5:15. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2018.00015

Received

15 December 2017

Accepted

21 February 2018

Published

12 March 2018

Volume

5 - 2018

Edited by

Guillermo Tellez, University of Arkansas, United States

Reviewed by

Alissa Welsher, Adisseo, France; Silvia Carrillo, Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y Nutrición Salvador Zubirán, Mexico

Updates

Copyright

*Correspondence: Yan Huang,

Specialty section: This article was submitted to Nutrigenomics, a section of the journal Frontiers in Nutrition

Disclaimer

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

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