Sox11富含肌源性祖细胞,但对于骨骼肌的发育和再生是可有可无的。

IF 5.3 2区 医学 Q2 CELL BIOLOGY
Stephanie N Oprescu, Nick Baumann, Xiyue Chen, Qiang Sun, Yu Zhao, Feng Yue, Huating Wang, Shihuan Kuang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

转录因子(TF)在调节干细胞的分化和功能方面发挥着关键作用,包括肌肉卫星细胞(MuSC),这是一种负责骨骼肌产后再生的常驻干细胞群体。Sox11属于Sry相关的HMG盒(SOX)TF家族,在干细胞行为和组织规范中发挥着不同的作用。单细胞RNA测序(scRNA-seq)数据集的分析确定了Sox11mRNA在分化而非静止的MuSC中的特异性富集。与scRNA-seq数据一致,Sox11水平在体外小鼠原代成肌细胞分化过程中增加。比较年轻和老年小鼠肌肉再生的scRNA-seq数据进一步表明,Sox11在老年MuSC中的表达减少。Sox11表达的年龄相关下降与拓扑相关结构域内染色质接触减少有关。出乎意料的是,胚胎成肌细胞中Myod1Cre驱动的Sox11缺失对肌肉发育和生长没有影响,导致明显健康的肌肉正常再生。成年小鼠中由Pax7CreER-或Rosa26CreER-驱动的(MuSC特异性或全局性)Sox11缺失同样对MuSC分化或肌肉再生没有影响。这些结果表明,Sox11是一种新的肌源分化标记物,在静止和衰老的MuSC中表达减少,但Sox11在肌发生中的具体功能仍有待阐明。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Sox11 is enriched in myogenic progenitors but dispensable for development and regeneration of the skeletal muscle.

Sox11 is enriched in myogenic progenitors but dispensable for development and regeneration of the skeletal muscle.

Sox11 is enriched in myogenic progenitors but dispensable for development and regeneration of the skeletal muscle.

Sox11 is enriched in myogenic progenitors but dispensable for development and regeneration of the skeletal muscle.

Transcription factors (TFs) play key roles in regulating differentiation and function of stem cells, including muscle satellite cells (MuSCs), a resident stem cell population responsible for postnatal regeneration of the skeletal muscle. Sox11 belongs to the Sry-related HMG-box (SOX) family of TFs that play diverse roles in stem cell behavior and tissue specification. Analysis of single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) datasets identify a specific enrichment of Sox11 mRNA in differentiating but not quiescent MuSCs. Consistent with the scRNA-seq data, Sox11 levels increase during differentiation of murine primary myoblasts in vitro. scRNA-seq data comparing muscle regeneration in young and old mice further demonstrate that Sox11 expression is reduced in aged MuSCs. Age-related decline of Sox11 expression is associated with reduced chromatin contacts within the topologically associating domains. Unexpectedly, Myod1Cre-driven deletion of Sox11 in embryonic myoblasts has no effects on muscle development and growth, resulting in apparently healthy muscles that regenerate normally. Pax7CreER- or Rosa26CreER- driven (MuSC-specific or global) deletion of Sox11 in adult mice similarly has no effects on MuSC differentiation or muscle regeneration. These results identify Sox11 as a novel myogenic differentiation marker with reduced expression in quiescent and aged MuSCs, but the specific function of Sox11 in myogenesis remains to be elucidated.

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来源期刊
Skeletal Muscle
Skeletal Muscle CELL BIOLOGY-
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: The only open access journal in its field, Skeletal Muscle publishes novel, cutting-edge research and technological advancements that investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the biology of skeletal muscle. Reflecting the breadth of research in this area, the journal welcomes manuscripts about the development, metabolism, the regulation of mass and function, aging, degeneration, dystrophy and regeneration of skeletal muscle, with an emphasis on understanding adult skeletal muscle, its maintenance, and its interactions with non-muscle cell types and regulatory modulators. Main areas of interest include: -differentiation of skeletal muscle- atrophy and hypertrophy of skeletal muscle- aging of skeletal muscle- regeneration and degeneration of skeletal muscle- biology of satellite and satellite-like cells- dystrophic degeneration of skeletal muscle- energy and glucose homeostasis in skeletal muscle- non-dystrophic genetic diseases of skeletal muscle, such as Spinal Muscular Atrophy and myopathies- maintenance of neuromuscular junctions- roles of ryanodine receptors and calcium signaling in skeletal muscle- roles of nuclear receptors in skeletal muscle- roles of GPCRs and GPCR signaling in skeletal muscle- other relevant aspects of skeletal muscle biology. In addition, articles on translational clinical studies that address molecular and cellular mechanisms of skeletal muscle will be published. Case reports are also encouraged for submission. Skeletal Muscle reflects the breadth of research on skeletal muscle and bridges gaps between diverse areas of science for example cardiac cell biology and neurobiology, which share common features with respect to cell differentiation, excitatory membranes, cell-cell communication, and maintenance. Suitable articles are model and mechanism-driven, and apply statistical principles where appropriate; purely descriptive studies are of lesser interest.
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