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Constitutive activation of estrogen receptor α signaling in muscle prolongs exercise endurance in mice.

Estrogen is a female hormone that plays a role in various tissues, although the mechanism in skeletal muscle has not been fully clarified. We previously showed that systemic administration of estrogen for 10 weeks ameliorated decreased exercise endurance in ovariectomized mice. To assess whether a long-term and muscle-specific activation of estrogen signaling modulates muscle function, we constructed an expression plasmid for a constitutively active estrogen receptor α (caERα) under the control of muscle creatine kinase (Mck) gene promoter/enhancer. In C2C12 mouse myoblastic cells, transfection of the Mck-caERα plasmid elevated the estrogen response element-driven transcription in a ligand-independent manner. Using this construct, we generated Mck-caERα transgenic mice, in which caERα is predominantly expressed in muscle. Treadmill running test revealed that female Mck-caERα mice exhibit a prolonged running time and distance compared with the wild-type mice. Moreover, microarray expression analysis revealed that the genes related to lipid metabolism, insulin signaling, and growth factor signaling were particularly upregulated in the quadriceps femoris muscle of Mck-caERα mice. These results suggest that estrogen signaling potentiates exercise endurance in skeletal muscle through modulating the expression of metabolism-associated genes.

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