揭示肌肉炎症与卫星细胞活性之间的双向关系:影响因素与启示。

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q4 CELL BIOLOGY
Esmail Karami, Behzad Bazgir, Hossein Shirvani, Mohammad Taghi Mohammadi, Mansoor Khaledi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

炎症是免疫系统与生俱来的重要功能,对维持生理平衡至关重要。炎症在骨骼肌再生中的作用举足轻重,卫星细胞(SC)的活化推动了新肌纤维的修复和生成。然而,炎症与卫星细胞之间的关系错综复杂,受到各种因素的影响。肌肉损伤和修复会促使免疫细胞,尤其是巨噬细胞大量渗入肌肉组织。来自不同类型细胞(包括免疫细胞、纤维生成祖细胞和 SCs)的细胞因子和趋化因子相互作用,进一步塑造了炎症与 SCs 的动态关系。一些研究表明,炎症加剧会降低自体细胞的活性,增加纤维或脂肪的生成,而另一些研究则表明,炎症刺激有利于自体细胞功能的发挥。然而,现有文献很难明确区分炎症对 SCs 和肌肉再生的刺激和抑制作用。本文全面回顾了探讨药物、饮食干预、遗传因素和运动疗法对炎症和 SC 活动之间相互作用影响的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Unraveling the bidirectional relationship between muscle inflammation and satellite cells activity: influencing factors and insights.

Inflammation stands as a vital and innate function of the immune system, essential for maintaining physiological homeostasis. Its role in skeletal muscle regeneration is pivotal, with the activation of satellite cells (SCs) driving the repair and generation of new myofibers. However, the relationship between inflammation and SCs is intricate, influenced by various factors. Muscle injury and repair prompt significant infiltration of immune cells, particularly macrophages, into the muscle tissue. The interplay of cytokines and chemokines from diverse cell types, including immune cells, fibroadipogenic progenitors, and SCs, further shapes the inflammation-SCs dynamic. While some studies suggest heightened inflammation associates with reduced SC activity and increased fibro- or adipogenesis, others indicate an inflammatory stimulus benefits SC function. Yet, the existing literature struggles to delineate clearly between the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of inflammation on SCs and muscle regeneration. This paper comprehensively reviews studies exploring the impact of pharmacological agents, dietary interventions, genetic factors, and exercise regimes on the interplay between inflammation and SC activity.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility has as its main aim the publication of original research which bears on either the excitation and contraction of muscle, the analysis of any one of the processes involved therein, the processes underlying contractility and motility of animal and plant cells, the toxicology and pharmacology related to contractility, or the formation, dynamics and turnover of contractile structures in muscle and non-muscle cells. Studies describing the impact of pathogenic mutations in genes encoding components of contractile structures in humans or animals are welcome, provided they offer mechanistic insight into the disease process or the underlying gene function. The policy of the Journal is to encourage any form of novel practical study whatever its specialist interest, as long as it falls within this broad field. Theoretical essays are welcome provided that they are concise and suggest practical ways in which they may be tested. Manuscripts reporting new mutations in known disease genes without validation and mechanistic insight will not be considered. It is the policy of the journal that cells lines, hybridomas and DNA clones should be made available by the developers to any qualified investigator. Submission of a manuscript for publication constitutes an agreement of the authors to abide by this principle.
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