scholarly journals Telomere length assessments of muscle stem cells in rodent and human skeletal muscle sections

2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 100830
Author(s):  
Elisia D. Tichy ◽  
Foteini Mourkioti
Author(s):  
DC Turner ◽  
PP Gorski ◽  
MF Maasar ◽  
RA Seaborne ◽  
P Baumert ◽  
...  

AbstractSkeletal muscle tissue demonstrates global hypermethylation with aging. However, methylome changes across the time-course of differentiation in aged human muscle derived stem cells, and larger coverage arrays in aged muscle tissue have not been undertaken. Using 850K DNA methylation arrays we compared the methylomes of young (27 ± 4.4 years) and aged (83 ± 4 years) human skeletal muscle and that of young/aged muscle stem cells over several time points of differentiation (0, 72 hours, 7, 10 days). Aged muscle tissue was hypermethylated compared with young tissue, enriched for; ‘pathways-in-cancer’ (including; focal adhesion, MAPK signaling, PI3K-Akt-mTOR signaling, p53 signaling, Jak-STAT signaling, TGF-beta and notch signaling), ‘rap1-signaling’, ‘axon-guidance’ and ‘hippo-signalling’. Aged muscle stem cells also demonstrated a hypermethylated profile in pathways; ‘axon-guidance’, ‘adherens-junction’ and ‘calcium-signaling’, particularly at later timepoints of myotube formation, corresponding with reduced morphological differentiation and reductions in MyoD/Myogenin gene expression compared with young cells. While young cells showed little alteration in DNA methylation during differentiation, aged cells demonstrated extensive and significantly altered DNA methylation, particularly at 7 days of differentiation and most notably in the ‘focal adhesion’ and ‘PI3K-AKT signalling’ pathways. While the methylomes were vastly different between muscle tissue and isolated muscle stem cells, we identified a small number of CpG sites showing a hypermethylated state with age, in both muscle and tissue and stem cells (on genes KIF15, DYRK2, FHL2, MRPS33, ABCA17P). Most notably, differential methylation analysis of chromosomal regions identified three locations containing enrichment of 6-8 CpGs in the HOX family of genes altered with age. With HOXD10, HOXD9, HOXD8, HOXA3, HOXC9, HOXB1, HOXB3, HOXC-AS2 and HOXC10 all hypermethylated in aged tissue. In aged cells the same HOX genes (and additionally HOXC-AS3) displayed the most variable methylation at 7 days of differentiation versus young cells, with HOXD8, HOXC9, HOXB1 and HOXC-AS3 hypermethylated and HOXC10 and HOXC-AS2 hypomethylated. We also determined that there was an inverse relationship between DNA methylation and gene expression for HOXB1, HOXA3 and HOXC-AS3. Finally, increased physical activity in young adults was associated with oppositely regulating HOXB1 and HOXA3 methylation compared with age. Overall, we demonstrate that a considerable number of HOX genes are differentially epigenetically regulated in aged human skeletal muscle and muscle stem cells and increased physical activity may help prevent age-related epigenetic changes in these HOX genes.


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinhong Meng ◽  
Maximilien Bencze ◽  
Rowan Asfahani ◽  
Francesco Muntoni ◽  
Jennifer E Morgan

2014 ◽  
Vol 289 (20) ◽  
pp. 14380-14391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nobuaki Ozeki ◽  
Makio Mogi ◽  
Hideyuki Yamaguchi ◽  
Taiki Hiyama ◽  
Rie Kawai ◽  
...  

BMC Medicine ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cajsa Davegårdh ◽  
Christa Broholm ◽  
Alexander Perfilyev ◽  
Tora Henriksen ◽  
Sonia García-Calzón ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jonas B. Jensen ◽  
Andreas B. Møller ◽  
Jesper Just ◽  
Maike Mose ◽  
Frank V. de Paoli ◽  
...  

Animal models clearly illustrate that the maintenance of skeletal muscle mass depends on the function and interaction of a heterogeneous population of resident and infiltrating mononuclear cells. Several lines of evidence suggest that mononuclear cells also play a role in muscle wasting in humans, and targeting these cells may open new treatment options for intervention or prevention in sarcopenia. Methodological and ethical constraints have perturbed exploration of the cellular characteristics and function of mononuclear cells in human skeletal muscle. Thus, investigations of cellular phenotypes often depend on immunohistochemical analysis of small tissue samples obtained by needle biopsies, which do not match the deep phenotyping of mononuclear cells obtained from animal models. Here, we have developed a protocol for Fluorescence Activated Cell Sorting (FACS), based on single-cell RNA-sequencing data, for quantifying and characterizing mononuclear cell populations in human skeletal muscle. Muscle stem cells, fibro-adipogenic progenitors, and two subsets of macrophages (CD11c+/-) are present in needle biopsies in comparable quantities per milligram tissue to open surgical biopsies. We find that direct cell isolation is preferable due to a substantial shift in transcriptome when using pre-culture before the FACS procedure. Finally, in vitro validation of the cellular phenotype of muscle stem cells, fibro-adipogenic progenitors, and macrophages confirms population specific traits. This study demonstrates that mononuclear cell populations can be quantified and subsequently analyzed from needle biopsy material and opens the perspective for future clinical studies of cellular mechanisms in muscle wasting.


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