Myogenic-specific ablation of Fgfr1 impairs FGF2-mediated proliferation of satellite cells at the myofiber niche but does not abolish the capacity for muscle regeneration

Skeletal muscle satellite cells (SCs) are Pax7+ myogenic stem cells that reside between the basal lamina and the plasmalemma of the myofiber. In mature muscles, SCs are typically quiescent, but can be activated in response to muscle injury. Depending on the magnitude of tissue trauma, SCs may divide...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zipora eYablonka-Reuveni, Maria Elena eDanoviz, Michael ePhelps, Pascal eStuelsatz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnagi.2015.00085/full
id doaj-9d79f786b3ed479c951e4cfd09832445
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9d79f786b3ed479c951e4cfd098324452020-11-24T23:41:45ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience1663-43652015-05-01710.3389/fnagi.2015.00085144100Myogenic-specific ablation of Fgfr1 impairs FGF2-mediated proliferation of satellite cells at the myofiber niche but does not abolish the capacity for muscle regenerationZipora eYablonka-Reuveni0Maria Elena eDanoviz1Michael ePhelps2Pascal eStuelsatz3University of WashingtonUniversity of WashingtonUniversity of WashingtonUniversity of WashingtonSkeletal muscle satellite cells (SCs) are Pax7+ myogenic stem cells that reside between the basal lamina and the plasmalemma of the myofiber. In mature muscles, SCs are typically quiescent, but can be activated in response to muscle injury. Depending on the magnitude of tissue trauma, SCs may divide minimally to repair subtle damage within individual myofibers or produce a larger progeny pool that forms new myofibers in cases of overt muscle injury. SC transition through proliferation, differentiation and renewal is governed by the molecular blueprint of the cells as well as by the extracellular milieu at the SC niche. In particular, the role of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family in regulating SCs during growth and aging is well recognized. Of the several FGFs shown to affect SCs, FGF1, FGF2 and FGF6 proteins have been documented in adult skeletal muscle. These prototypic paracrine FGFs transmit their mitogenic effect through the FGFRs, which are transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptors. Using the mouse model, we show here that of the four FGFRs, only Fgfr1 and Fgfr4 are expressed at relatively high levels in quiescent SCs and their proliferating progeny. To further investigate the role of FGFR1 in adult myogenesis, we have employed a genetic (Cre/loxP) approach for myogenic-specific (MyoDCre-driven) ablation of Fgfr1. Neither muscle histology nor muscle regeneration following cardiotoxin-induced injury were overtly affected in Fgfr1-ablated mice. This suggests that FGFR1 is not obligatory for SC performance in this acute muscle trauma model, where compensatory growth factor/cytokine regulatory cascades may exist. However, the SC mitogenic response to FGF2 is drastically repressed in isolated myofibers prepared from Fgfr1-ablated mice. Collectively, our study indicates that FGFR1 is important for FGF-mediated proliferation of SCs and its mitogenic role is not compensated by FGFR4 that is also highly expressed in SCs.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnagi.2015.00085/fullFlow CytometryMuscle SpindlesMyogeninskeletal muscleFGFR1satellite cells
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zipora eYablonka-Reuveni
Maria Elena eDanoviz
Michael ePhelps
Pascal eStuelsatz
spellingShingle Zipora eYablonka-Reuveni
Maria Elena eDanoviz
Michael ePhelps
Pascal eStuelsatz
Myogenic-specific ablation of Fgfr1 impairs FGF2-mediated proliferation of satellite cells at the myofiber niche but does not abolish the capacity for muscle regeneration
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
Flow Cytometry
Muscle Spindles
Myogenin
skeletal muscle
FGFR1
satellite cells
author_facet Zipora eYablonka-Reuveni
Maria Elena eDanoviz
Michael ePhelps
Pascal eStuelsatz
author_sort Zipora eYablonka-Reuveni
title Myogenic-specific ablation of Fgfr1 impairs FGF2-mediated proliferation of satellite cells at the myofiber niche but does not abolish the capacity for muscle regeneration
title_short Myogenic-specific ablation of Fgfr1 impairs FGF2-mediated proliferation of satellite cells at the myofiber niche but does not abolish the capacity for muscle regeneration
title_full Myogenic-specific ablation of Fgfr1 impairs FGF2-mediated proliferation of satellite cells at the myofiber niche but does not abolish the capacity for muscle regeneration
title_fullStr Myogenic-specific ablation of Fgfr1 impairs FGF2-mediated proliferation of satellite cells at the myofiber niche but does not abolish the capacity for muscle regeneration
title_full_unstemmed Myogenic-specific ablation of Fgfr1 impairs FGF2-mediated proliferation of satellite cells at the myofiber niche but does not abolish the capacity for muscle regeneration
title_sort myogenic-specific ablation of fgfr1 impairs fgf2-mediated proliferation of satellite cells at the myofiber niche but does not abolish the capacity for muscle regeneration
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
issn 1663-4365
publishDate 2015-05-01
description Skeletal muscle satellite cells (SCs) are Pax7+ myogenic stem cells that reside between the basal lamina and the plasmalemma of the myofiber. In mature muscles, SCs are typically quiescent, but can be activated in response to muscle injury. Depending on the magnitude of tissue trauma, SCs may divide minimally to repair subtle damage within individual myofibers or produce a larger progeny pool that forms new myofibers in cases of overt muscle injury. SC transition through proliferation, differentiation and renewal is governed by the molecular blueprint of the cells as well as by the extracellular milieu at the SC niche. In particular, the role of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family in regulating SCs during growth and aging is well recognized. Of the several FGFs shown to affect SCs, FGF1, FGF2 and FGF6 proteins have been documented in adult skeletal muscle. These prototypic paracrine FGFs transmit their mitogenic effect through the FGFRs, which are transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptors. Using the mouse model, we show here that of the four FGFRs, only Fgfr1 and Fgfr4 are expressed at relatively high levels in quiescent SCs and their proliferating progeny. To further investigate the role of FGFR1 in adult myogenesis, we have employed a genetic (Cre/loxP) approach for myogenic-specific (MyoDCre-driven) ablation of Fgfr1. Neither muscle histology nor muscle regeneration following cardiotoxin-induced injury were overtly affected in Fgfr1-ablated mice. This suggests that FGFR1 is not obligatory for SC performance in this acute muscle trauma model, where compensatory growth factor/cytokine regulatory cascades may exist. However, the SC mitogenic response to FGF2 is drastically repressed in isolated myofibers prepared from Fgfr1-ablated mice. Collectively, our study indicates that FGFR1 is important for FGF-mediated proliferation of SCs and its mitogenic role is not compensated by FGFR4 that is also highly expressed in SCs.
topic Flow Cytometry
Muscle Spindles
Myogenin
skeletal muscle
FGFR1
satellite cells
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnagi.2015.00085/full
work_keys_str_mv AT ziporaeyablonkareuveni myogenicspecificablationoffgfr1impairsfgf2mediatedproliferationofsatellitecellsatthemyofibernichebutdoesnotabolishthecapacityformuscleregeneration
AT mariaelenaedanoviz myogenicspecificablationoffgfr1impairsfgf2mediatedproliferationofsatellitecellsatthemyofibernichebutdoesnotabolishthecapacityformuscleregeneration
AT michaelephelps myogenicspecificablationoffgfr1impairsfgf2mediatedproliferationofsatellitecellsatthemyofibernichebutdoesnotabolishthecapacityformuscleregeneration
AT pascalestuelsatz myogenicspecificablationoffgfr1impairsfgf2mediatedproliferationofsatellitecellsatthemyofibernichebutdoesnotabolishthecapacityformuscleregeneration
_version_ 1725505524328300544