Low testosterone in males (hypogonadism) is associated with limb muscle mass loss, yet the underlying mechanisms of muscle mass loss remain largely unknown. We previously showed androgen deprivation disrupted limb muscle molecular clock function, and the disruption coincided with elevated levels of the primary molecular clock suppressor, Period 2 (Per2). The purposes herein were to determine if PER2 overexpression leads to muscle atrophy and if preventing PER2 accumulation blunts limb muscle mass loss in response to androgen deprivation. Here, we identify Per2 as a negative regulator of muscle size. Overexpression of Per2 in differentiated C2C12 myotubes reduced myotube diameter, while deletion of Per2 in male mice partially preserved tibialis anterior (TA) mass following castration. The muscle-sparing effect of Per2 deletion in vivo was specific to the TA despite evidence of molecular clock disruption and mass loss in other muscles. Subsequently, we show overexpression of the other primary clock suppressor, Period 1 (Per1) also reduced myotube diameter in differentiated C2C12 myotubes. Mechanistically, both Per1 and Per2 overexpression in vitro induced muscle atrophy in part by an autocrine-mediated mechanism likely involving inflammation as their overexpression induced an inflammatory gene expression signature and increased cytokine/chemokine secretion. Moreover, incubation of C2C12 myotubes in the media conditioned from Per1 or Per2 overexpressing myotubes reduced myotube diameter. Several inflammatory genes identified in vitro were also altered in the limb muscles in response to androgen deprivation. These findings identify a previously unrecognized role for Per1/2 in regulating skeletal muscle mass with implications for muscle loss during hypogonadism.
© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of American Physiological Society.