scholarly journals Myf6/MRF4 is a Myogenic Niche Regulator Required for the Maintenance of the Muscle Stem Cell Pool

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felicia Lazure ◽  
Darren M. Blackburn ◽  
Nabila Karam ◽  
Korin Sahinyan ◽  
Ahmad Sharanek ◽  
...  

AbstractIn metazoans, skeletal muscle evolved to contract and produce force. However, recent experimental evidence suggests that skeletal muscle has also acquired endocrine functions and produces a vast array of myokines. Using ChIP-Seq and gene expression analyses of myogenic factors, we show that Myf6/MRF4 transcriptionally regulates a broad spectrum of myokines and muscle-secreted proteins, including ligands for downstream activation of key signaling pathways such as EGFR, STAT3 and VEGFR. Homozygous deletion of Myf6 causes a significant reduction in the ability of muscle to produce key myokines such as EGF, VEGFA and LIF. Consequently, although Myf6 knockout mice are born with a normal muscle stem cell compartment, they undergo progressive reduction in their stem cell pool during postnatal life. Mechanistically, muscle stem cells from the Myf6 knockout animals show defects in activation of EGFR and STAT3 signaling, upregulate the p38 MAP kinase pathway and spontaneously break from quiescence. Exogenous application of recombinant EGF and LIF rescue the defects in the muscle stem cell pool of Myf6 knockout animals. Finally, skeletal muscles of mice lacking Myf6 have a significantly reduced ability to sustain donor-engrafted muscle stem cells. Taken together, our data uncovers a novel role for Myf6 in regulating the expression of niche factors and myokines to maintain the skeletal muscle stem cell pool in adult mice.

2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rhianna C. Laker ◽  
James G. Ryall

An unresolved and critically important question in skeletal muscle biology is how muscle stem cells initiate and regulate the genetic program during muscle development. Epigenetic dynamics are essential for cellular development and organogenesis in early life and it is becoming increasingly clear that epigenetic remodeling may also be responsible for the cellular adaptations that occur in later life. DNA methylation of cytosine bases within CpG dinucleotide pairs is an important epigenetic modification that reduces gene expression when located within a promoter or enhancer region. Recent advances in the field suggest that epigenetic regulation is essential for skeletal muscle stem cell identity and subsequent cell development. This review summarizes what is currently known about how skeletal muscle stem cells regulate the myogenic program through DNA methylation, discusses a novel role for metabolism in this process, and addresses DNA methylation dynamics in adult skeletal muscle in response to physical activity.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 744
Author(s):  
Matthew Borok ◽  
Nathalie Didier ◽  
Francesca Gattazzo ◽  
Teoman Ozturk ◽  
Aurelien Corneau ◽  
...  

Background: Skeletal muscle is one of the only mammalian tissues capable of rapid and efficient regeneration after trauma or in pathological conditions. Skeletal muscle regeneration is driven by the muscle satellite cells, the stem cell population in interaction with their niche. Upon injury, muscle fibers undergo necrosis and muscle stem cells activate, proliferate and fuse to form new myofibers. In addition to myogenic cell populations, interaction with other cell types such as inflammatory cells, mesenchymal (fibroadipogenic progenitors—FAPs, pericytes) and vascular (endothelial) lineages are important for efficient muscle repair. While the role of the distinct populations involved in skeletal muscle regeneration is well characterized, the quantitative changes in the muscle stem cell and niche during the regeneration process remain poorly characterized. Methods: We have used mass cytometry to follow the main muscle cell types (muscle stem cells, vascular, mesenchymal and immune cell lineages) during early activation and over the course of muscle regeneration at D0, D2, D5 and D7 compared with uninjured muscles. Results: Early activation induces a number of rapid changes in the proteome of multiple cell types. Following the induction of damage, we observe a drastic loss of myogenic, vascular and mesenchymal cell lineages while immune cells invade the damaged tissue to clear debris and promote muscle repair. Immune cells constitute up to 80% of the mononuclear cells 5 days post-injury. We show that muscle stem cells are quickly activated in order to form new myofibers and reconstitute the quiescent muscle stem cell pool. In addition, our study provides a quantitative analysis of the various myogenic populations during muscle repair. Conclusions: We have developed a mass cytometry panel to investigate the dynamic nature of muscle regeneration at a single-cell level. Using our panel, we have identified early changes in the proteome of stressed satellite and niche cells. We have also quantified changes in the major cell types of skeletal muscle during regeneration and analyzed myogenic transcription factor expression in satellite cells throughout this process. Our results highlight the progressive dynamic shifts in cell populations and the distinct states of muscle stem cells adopted during skeletal muscle regeneration. Our findings give a deeper understanding of the cellular and molecular aspects of muscle regeneration.


eLife ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenxuan Liu ◽  
Alanna Klose ◽  
Sophie Forman ◽  
Nicole D Paris ◽  
Lan Wei-LaPierre ◽  
...  

Neuromuscular junction degeneration is a prominent aspect of sarcopenia, the age-associated loss of skeletal muscle integrity. Previously, we showed that muscle stem cells activate and contribute to mouse neuromuscular junction regeneration in response to denervation (Liu et al., 2015). Here, we examined gene expression profiles and neuromuscular junction integrity in aged mouse muscles, and unexpectedly found limited denervation despite a high level of degenerated neuromuscular junctions. Instead, degenerated neuromuscular junctions were associated with reduced contribution from muscle stem cells. Indeed, muscle stem cell depletion was sufficient to induce neuromuscular junction degeneration at a younger age. Conversely, prevention of muscle stem cell and derived myonuclei loss was associated with attenuation of age-related neuromuscular junction degeneration, muscle atrophy, and the promotion of aged muscle force generation. Our observations demonstrate that deficiencies in muscle stem cell fate and post-synaptic myogenesis provide a cellular basis for age-related neuromuscular junction degeneration and associated skeletal muscle decline.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-21
Author(s):  
Silvia Cristini ◽  
Giulio Alessandri ◽  
Francesco Acerbi ◽  
Daniela Tavian ◽  
Eugenio A. Parati ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-21
Author(s):  
Silvia Cristini ◽  
Giulio Alessandri ◽  
Francesco Acerbi ◽  
Daniela Tavian ◽  
Eugenio A. Parati ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Romina L. Filippelli ◽  
Natasha C. Chang

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a devastating and debilitating muscle degenerative disease affecting 1 in every 3,500 male births worldwide. DMD is progressive and fatal; accumulated weakening of the muscle tissue leads to an inability to walk and eventual loss of life due to respiratory and cardiac failure. Importantly, there remains no effective cure for DMD. DMD is caused by defective expression of the <i>DMD</i> gene, which encodes for dystrophin, a component of the dystrophin glycoprotein complex. In muscle fibers, this protein complex plays a critical role in maintaining muscle membrane integrity. Emerging studies have shown that muscle stem cells, which are adult stem cells responsible for muscle repair, are also affected in DMD. DMD muscle stem cells do not function as healthy muscle stem cells, and their impairment contributes to disease progression. Deficiencies in muscle stem cell function include impaired establishment of cell polarity leading to defective asymmetric stem cell division, reduced myogenic commitment, impaired differentiation, altered metabolism, and enhanced entry into senescence. Altogether, these findings indicate that DMD muscle stem cells are dysfunctional and have impaired regenerative potential. Although recent advances in adeno-associated vector and antisense oligonucleotide-mediated mechanisms for gene therapy have shown clinical promise, the current therapeutic strategies for muscular dystrophy do not effectively target muscle stem cells and do not address the deficiencies in muscle stem cell function. Here, we discuss the merits of restoring endogenous muscle stem cell function in degenerating muscle as a viable regenerative medicine strategy to mitigate DMD.


2015 ◽  
Vol 210 (5) ◽  
pp. 717-726 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice Parisi ◽  
Floriane Lacour ◽  
Lorenzo Giordani ◽  
Sabine Colnot ◽  
Pascal Maire ◽  
...  

The tumor suppressor adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) is a crucial regulator of many stem cell types. In constantly cycling stem cells of fast turnover tissues, APC loss results in the constitutive activation of a Wnt target gene program that massively increases proliferation and leads to malignant transformation. However, APC function in skeletal muscle, a tissue with a low turnover rate, has never been investigated. Here we show that conditional genetic disruption of APC in adult muscle stem cells results in the abrogation of adult muscle regenerative potential. We demonstrate that APC removal in adult muscle stem cells abolishes cell cycle entry and leads to cell death. By using double knockout strategies, we further prove that this phenotype is attributable to overactivation of β-catenin signaling. Our results demonstrate that in muscle stem cells, APC dampens canonical Wnt signaling to allow cell cycle progression and radically diverge from previous observations concerning stem cells in actively self-renewing tissues.


Blood ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
HIDEAKI MIZOGUCHI ◽  
YASUSADA MIURA ◽  
FUMIMARO TAKAKU ◽  
KIKU NAKAO

Abstract It is shown that an in vitro system of assaying the size of an erythropoietin-responsive stem cell pool could be applied to the spleens of polycythemic mice after irradiation and bone marrow transplantation. With this method, the presence of erythropoietin-responsive cells in the spleen was first detected on the second day after transplantation. Therefore, it is considered probable that colony-forming cells and erythropoietin-responsive cells are at different stages of maturation or cell cycle. Furthermore, necessity of erythropoietin for further differentiation of transplanted stem cells into erythroblasts is also suggested.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 3730-3730
Author(s):  
Evan J Colletti ◽  
Melisa Soland ◽  
Stephen St. Jeor ◽  
Esmail D Zanjani ◽  
Christopher D Porada ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3730 Although a great deal of attention has been focused on developing cell based therapies for cardiac repair, only limited success has been achieved to date. Controversy still remains as to which specific type of cells should be transplanted and what role they play in the repair of damaged areas. Human autologous mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are currently being used in clinical trials, and early results show improvement in the overall cardiac function. This improvement is mediated by inhibition of inflammatory signaling, fibroblast recruitment, and scar tissue development; however, little to none of the transplanted cells contribute to the working myocardium. It is likely that the extensive rate of cell death observed within cells efficiently delivered to the heart constitutes a key event precluding success of cell-based myocardial repair. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL), important mediators of allograft rejection, have also been implicated in immune responses against cardiac self-antigens subsequent to myocardial damage after myocardial infarction. Likewise, Natural Killer (NK) cells play an important role in targeting and destroying allogeneic and autologous cells undergoing distress. Therefore, it is possible that, in the event of myocardial damage, CTL and NK cells present at the site of injury contribute significantly to the death of the cells delivered for myocardial rescue, reducing their therapeutic effectiveness. We have shown that MSC transduced with a viral vector encoding the human cytomegalovirus unique short region 6, (hMSC-US6), are less susceptible to both NK killing and induction of CTL proliferation when compared to untransduced MSC, and to MSC transduced with a vector encoding only NPT-II (MSC-E). Therefore, in these studies we compared the ability of hMSC-US6 and hMSC-E to give rise to cardiac cells upon transplantation in a xenogeneic sheep fetal model. 5.6×104 of each cell population was transplanted into fetal sheep at 60 days of gestation (n=4). Two months after transplant, heart tissues were collected and the contribution of transplanted MSC to the fetal hearts was evaluated by confocal microscopy and NPT-II immunofluorescence. Examination of hearts from animals transplanted with MSC-US6 showed that engrafted cells contributed not only to the myocardium, as demonstrated by co-localization of NPT-II and Troponin-I (TNI), but were also able to contribute to the cardiac stem cell pool, as evidenced by co-localization of NPT-II and c-kit positivity. In the myocardium, MSC-US6 contributed to 2.6% of total TNI+ cardiomyocytes (53.9% of all cells in the heart are TNI+ at this stage of fetal gestation). Furthermore, at this stage in development, the c-kit+ cardiac progenitor pool constitutes 12.7% of the total cells in the heart, with the majority of the c-kit population localizing perivascularly. Upon examination, 4.5% of these c-kit+ cells were also NPT-II+, demonstrating the contribution of MSC-US6 to the heart stem cell pool. By contrast, the heart of animals that received MSC-E did not contain NPT-II+/TNI+ cardiomyocytes or NPT-II+/c-kit+ cardiac stem cells; the transplanted cells only contributed to the Purkinje fiber system in the heart. Although the transplantation model used is a non-injury model, MSC are still able to elicit an immune response in this non-autologous setting, activating CTL and NK cells already present in the recipient at the time of transplant. In conclusion, our results show that expression of US-6 protein allows transplanted human MSC to evade existing CTL- and NK-mediated immunity and contribute to the myocardial tissue through integration into the cardiac stem cell pool in the chimeric fetal heart. Therefore, engineering MSC to evade resident immune cells may decrease post-infusion cell death and allow these cells to contribute directly to the repair/regeneration of the injured myocardium. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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