Intravital imaging reveals cell cycle-dependent myogenic cell migration during muscle regeneration
Yumi Konagaya, Kanako Takakura, Maina Sogabe, Anjali Bisaria, Chad Liu, Tobias Meyer, Atsuko Sehara‐Fujisawa, Michiyuki Matsuda, Kenta Terai
Abstract
, ERK is maximally activated in myogenic cells two days after injury, and this is then followed by increases in cell number and motility. With limited effects of ERK activity on migration on an acute timescale, we hypothesized that ERK increases migration speed in the later phase by promoting cell-cycle progression. Our cell-cycle analysis further revealed that in myogenic cells, ERK activity is critical for G1/S transition, and cells migrate more rapidly in S/G2 phase 3 days after injury. Finally, migration speed of myogenic cells was suppressed after CDK1/2-but not CDK1-inhibitor treatment, demonstrating a critical role of CDK2 in myogenic cell migration. Overall, our study demonstrates that in myogenic cells, the ERK-CDK2 axis promotes not only G1/S transition but also migration, thus providing a novel mechanism for efficient muscle regeneration.