Literature DB >> 15146538

C2C12 co-culture on a fibroblast substratum enables sustained survival of contractile, highly differentiated myotubes with peripheral nuclei and adult fast myosin expression.

S T Cooper1, A L Maxwell, E Kizana, M Ghoddusi, E C Hardeman, I E Alexander, D G Allen, K N North.   

Abstract

We describe a simple culture method for obtaining highly differentiated clonal C2C12 myotubes using a feeder layer of confluent fibroblasts, and document the expression of contractile protein expression and aspects of myofibre morphology using this system. Traditional culture methods using collagen- or laminin-coated tissue-culture plastic typically results in a cyclic pattern of detachment and reformation of myotubes, rarely producing myotubes of a mature adult phenotype. C2C12 co-culture on a fibroblast substratum facilitates the sustained culture of contractile myotubes, resulting in a mature sarcomeric register with evidence for peripherally migrating nuclei. Immunoblot analysis demonstrates that desmin, tropomyosin, sarcomeric actin, alpha-actinin-2 and slow myosin are detected throughout myogenic differentiation, whereas adult fast myosin heavy chain isoforms, members of the dystrophin-associated complex, and alpha-actinin-3 are not expressed at significant levels until >6 days of differentiation, coincident with the onset of contractile activity. Electrical stimulation of mature myotubes reveals typical and reproducible calcium transients, demonstrating functional maturation with respect to calcium handling proteins. Immunocytochemical staining demonstrates a well-defined sarcomeric register throughout the majority of myotubes (70-80%) and a striated staining pattern is observed for desmin, indicating alignment of the intermediate filament network with the sarcomeric register. We report that culture volume affects the fusion index and rate of sarcomeric development in developing myotubes and propose that a fibroblast feeder layer provides an elastic substratum to support contractile activity and likely secretes growth factors and extracellular matrix proteins that assist myotube development. Copyright 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15146538     DOI: 10.1002/cm.20010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Motil Cytoskeleton        ISSN: 0886-1544


  39 in total

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7.  Biomechanical strain vehicles for fibroblast-directed skeletal myoblast differentiation and myotube functionality in a novel coculture.

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8.  Engineering anisotropic 3D tubular tissues with flexible thermoresponsive nanofabricated substrates.

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Review 9.  Stem Cell Differentiation is Regulated by Extracellular Matrix Mechanics.

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