Litcius/Paper detail

Damaged Myofiber-Derived Metabolic Enzymes Act as Activators of Muscle Satellite Cells

Yoshifumi Tsuchiya, Yasuo Kitajima, Hiroshi Masumoto, Yusuke Ono

2020Stem Cell Reports52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Muscle satellite cells are normally quiescent but are rapidly activated following muscle damage. Here, we investigated whether damaged myofibers influence the activation of satellite cells. Our findings revealed that satellite cells are directly activated by damaged-myofiber-derived factors (DMDFs). DMDFs induced satellite cells to enter the cell cycle; however, the cells stayed at the G1 phase and did not undergo S phase, and these cells were reversible to the quiescent-like state. Proteome analysis identified metabolic enzymes, including GAPDH, as DMDFs, whose recombinant proteins stimulated the activation of satellite cells. Satellite cells pre-exposed to the DMDFs demonstrated accelerated proliferation ex vivo. Treatment with recombinant GAPDH prior to muscle injury promoted expansion of the satellite cell population in vivo. Thus, our results indicate that DMDFs are not only a set of biomarkers for muscle damage, but also act as moonlighting proteins involved in satellite cell activation at the initial step of muscle regeneration.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMyocyteSatelliteCell biologyCellPopulationCell cycleRegeneration (biology)Ex vivoIn vitroBiochemistryDemographySociologyEngineeringAerospace engineeringMuscle Physiology and DisordersTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicineElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications