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ABSTRACT
Exercise induces extensive, cell–type–specific transcriptional remodeling in skeletal muscle to support metabolic flexibility and adaptation. However, the regulatory mechanisms underlying these transcriptional programs, and the extent to which they differ between sexes, remain poorly defined. We previously reported that lifelong, muscle-specific overexpression of human Transcription Factor E-B (cTFEB;HSACre transgenic mice) recapitulates many adaptive features of endurance training in both sexes, leading to profound geroprotective effects during aging even in the absence of exercise. Here, we profile transcriptional adaptations to voluntary wheel running (VWR) and TFEB-overexpression at single-nucleus resolution in young male and female mouse tibialis anterior muscle. This represents, to our knowledge, the first integrated analysis of exercise and TFEB signaling using sex as a biological variable. Using robust bioinformatic and single-nuclei RNA-sequencing approaches, we profiled six muscle-resident cell populations and uncover previously unrecognized, sex-dependent signaling nodes governing exercise-associated metabolic plasticity. TFEB activation and endurance training by VWR elicit strongly correlated transcriptional programs enriched for lipid metabolism, mitochondrial remodeling, and immune modulation, establishing TFEB-overexpression as a partial exercise mimetic. In general, female muscle exhibited enhanced extracellular matrix and lipid-associated responses to endurance training and TFEB overexpression, whereas males preferentially engaged in angiogenic and oxidative networks, revealing distinct sex-specific, sex-dimorphic, or sex-agnostic regulatory routes to metabolic flexibility. Integration with independent multi-omics datasets from endurance-trained rats (MoTrPAC) confirms the conservation of TFEB–exercise transcriptional convergence in skeletal muscle across species and potentially muscle types. Together, these findings define TFEB as a regulator of exercise transcriptional programs and reveal sex-specific molecular frameworks that drive metabolic adaptation in skeletal muscle. Furthermore, the resulting sex-resolved, single-nucleus transcriptional atlas provides a unique resource for the field, enabling comparative, mechanistic, and hypothesis-driven exploration of exercise-responsive skeletal muscle regulatory networks across sexes.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
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