| Literature DB >> 35794679 |
So-Ichiro Fukada1, Tatsuyoshi Higashimoto2, Akihiro Kaneshige2,3.
Abstract
Skeletal muscle homeostasis and function are ensured by orchestrated cellular interactions among several types of cells. A noticeable aspect of skeletal muscle biology is the drastic cell-cell communication changes that occur in multiple scenarios. The process of recovering from an injury, which is known as regeneration, has been relatively well investigated. However, the cellular interplay that occurs in response to mechanical loading, such as during resistance training, is poorly understood compared to regeneration. During muscle regeneration, muscle satellite cells (MuSCs) rebuild multinuclear myofibers through a stepwise process of proliferation, differentiation, fusion, and maturation, whereas during mechanical loading-dependent muscle hypertrophy, MuSCs do not undergo such stepwise processes (except in rare injuries) because the nuclei of MuSCs become directly incorporated into the mature myonuclei. In this review, six specific examples of such differences in MuSC dynamics between regeneration and hypertrophy processes are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Differentiation; Hypertrophy; Muscle regeneration; Muscle satellite cells; Myonuclei
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35794679 PMCID: PMC9258228 DOI: 10.1186/s13395-022-00300-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Skelet Muscle ISSN: 2044-5040 Impact factor: 5.063
Fig. 1Process of skeletal muscle regeneration. When myofibers are damaged or dead, their debris is removed by inflammatory macrophages (M1 Mø). Using spaces and factors derived from macrophages and mesenchymal progenitors (FAPs), muscle satellite cells (MuSCs) actively proliferate (early stage). In the middle stage of regeneration, anti-inflammatory macrophages (M2 Mø) support the regulation of myogenic differentiation and nascent myofibers (myotubes), which grow to mature myofibers (late stage)
Fig. 2Process of mechanical-loaded muscle hypertrophy. In unloaded muscles, Yap/Taz is distributed in the cytoplasm of mesenchymal progenitors. Mechanical loading induces nuclear localization of Yap/Taz in mesenchymal progenitors, and MuSCs subsequently proliferate beneath the basal lamina by the mesenchymal progenitor-derived factor thrombospondin-1 (Thbs1). Proliferated MuSCs fuse with myofibers, which leads to an increased number of myonuclei. Notably, the new myonuclei are located in the peripheral position of myofibers
Fig. 3Macrophage infiltration. Immunostaining of F4/80 (green) and laminin α2 (red) in regenerating muscle (upper; from 3 days after cardiotoxin (CTX) injection) and loaded muscle (lower; from 4 days after tenotomy (Ope)). Nuclei were counterstained with DAPI (blue). Scale bar, 50 μm