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Follistatin 344

FS-344, Activin-Binding Protein, FST344

Quick Stats
Studies 2
Trials 73
Score 2
2016 pubmed

The transgenic expression of human follistatin-344 increases skeletal muscle mass in pigs.

Chang. Fei F; Fang. Rui R; Wang. Meng M; Zhao. Xin X; Chang. Wen W; Zhang. Zaihu Z; Li. Ning N; Meng. Qingyong Q

Key Findings

  • Muscle‑specific overexpression of follistatin‑344 increased skeletal muscle mass and reduced body fat in pigs.
  • Myofiber hypertrophy (larger muscle fibers) was observed, associated with decreased Smad2 phosphorylation and increased Akt S473 phosphorylation.
  • No adverse effects on heart size or reproductive health were detected in the transgenic pigs.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, this study supports the idea that boosting follistatin activity can promote muscle growth, but it was done via genetic engineering, not peptide dosing. It suggests that follistatin may be a safe target for muscle‑building strategies, yet no human dosage or delivery method is provided. Until practical administration protocols are developed, the findings are mainly confirmatory rather than directly actionable.

Summary

Scientists made pigs that produce extra human follistatin-344 just in their muscles. These pigs grew more muscle and less fat, mainly because their muscle fibers got bigger. The changes were linked to lower Smad2 activity and higher Akt activity, and the pigs showed no heart or reproductive problems.

Abstract

Follistatin (FST), which was first found in the follicles of cattle and pigs, has been shown to be an essential regulator for muscle development. Mice that were genetically engineered to overexpress Fst specifically in muscle had at least twice the amount of skeletal muscle mass as controls; these findings are similar to earlier results obtained in myostatin-knockout mice. However, the role of follistatin in skeletal muscle development has yet to be clarified in livestock. Here, we describe transgenic Duroc pigs that exogenously express Fst specifically in muscle tissue. The transgenic pigs exhibited an increased proportion of skeletal muscle and a reduced proportion of body fat that were similar to those reported in myostatin-null cattle. The lean percentage of lean meat was significantly higher in the F1 generation of TG pigs (72.95&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;1.0&#xa0;%) than in WT pigs (69.18&#xa0;&#xb1;&#xa0;0.97&#xa0;%) (N&#xa0;=&#xa0;16, P&#xa0;&lt;&#xa0;0.05). Myofiber hypertrophy was also observed in the longissimus dorsi of transgenic pigs, possibly contributing to the increased skeletal muscle mass. Western blot analysis showed a significantly reduced level of Smad2 phosphorylation and an increased level of Akt<sup>S473</sup> phosphorylation in the skeletal muscle tissue of the transgenic pigs. Moreover, no cardiac muscle hypertrophy or reproductive abnormality was observed. These findings indicate that muscle-specific Fst overexpression in pigs enhances skeletal muscle growth, at least partly due to myofiber hypertrophy and providing a promising approach to increase muscle mass in pigs and other livestock.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2016

Date

2016-10-27T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s11248-016-9985-x