Abstract

Skeletal muscle plays a key role in metabolic homeostasis. Brg1/Brm-associated factor (Baf) 60c, a subunit of the mating type switching/sucrose non-fermenting (SWI/SNF) chromatin remodeling complexes, was previously identified to be robustly involved in glycolytic muscle function and systemic metabolic balance. However, whether Baf60c regulates the secreted factors and couples the skeletal muscle function to systemic metabolism remains unclear. Here, we uncover that Baf60c regulates the expression of a series of secreted factors, among which Musclin, a recently identified negative regulator of beige adipocyte thermogenesis, was top-ranked in the upregulated factors in Baf60c-deficient muscle. Mechanistically, Baf60c physically interacts with the transcription factor myocyte enhancer factor 2c (Mef2c) and modulates the chromatin accessibility at the proximal promoter regions upstream of the Musclin gene transcription start site (TSS), therefore negatively regulating Musclin gene expression in the skeletal muscle. Further in vivo metabolic assays demonstrate that muscle-specific Baf60c ablation inhibits thermogenesis and elevates blood glucose. Conversely, muscle-specific overexpression of Baf60c increases thermogenesis and energy expenditure and improves systemic glucose metabolism. Together, this work uncovers Baf60c/Mef2c-mediated chromatin remodeling signaling in myocytes that control adipose tissue thermogenesis and systemic metabolism through Musclin-mediated muscle-fat crosstalk.

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Author notes

Shuang Han and Lu Jin contributed equally to this work

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