Litcius/Paper detail

Regulation of muscle stem cell fate

Xin Fu, Cheng‐Le Zhuang, Ping Hu

2022Cell Regeneration28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Skeletal muscle plays a critical role in human health. Muscle stem cells (MuSCs) serve as the major cell type contributing to muscle regeneration by directly differentiating to mature muscle cells. MuSCs usually remain quiescent with occasionally self-renewal and are activated to enter cell cycle for proliferation followed by differentiation upon muscle injury or under pathological conditions. The quiescence maintenance, activation, proliferation, and differentiation of MuSCs are tightly regulated. The MuSC cell-intrinsic regulatory network and the microenvironments work coordinately to orchestrate the fate transition of MuSCs. The heterogeneity of MuSCs further complicates the regulation of MuSCs. This review briefly summarizes the current progress on the heterogeneity of MuSCs and the microenvironments, epigenetic, and transcription regulations of MuSCs.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyStem cellCell biologyRegeneration (biology)Transcription factorEpigeneticsCellGeneticsGeneMuscle Physiology and DisordersUbiquitin and proteasome pathways