11 research outputs found

    The Stat3-Fam3a axis promotes muscle stem cell myogenic lineage progression by inducing mitochondrial respiration.

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    Metabolic reprogramming is an active regulator of stem cell fate choices, and successful stem cell differentiation in different compartments requires the induction of oxidative phosphorylation. However, the mechanisms that promote mitochondrial respiration during stem cell differentiation are poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that Stat3 promotes muscle stem cell myogenic lineage progression by stimulating mitochondrial respiration in mice. We identify Fam3a, a cytokine-like protein, as a major Stat3 downstream effector in muscle stem cells. We demonstrate that Fam3a is required for muscle stem cell commitment and skeletal muscle development. We show that myogenic cells secrete Fam3a, and exposure of Stat3-ablated muscle stem cells to recombinant Fam3a in vitro and in vivo rescues their defects in mitochondrial respiration and myogenic commitment. Together, these findings indicate that Fam3a is a Stat3-regulated secreted factor that promotes muscle stem cell oxidative metabolism and differentiation, and suggests that Fam3a is a potential tool to modulate cell fate choices

    Dynamics of cellular states of fibro-adipogenic progenitors during myogenesis and muscular dystrophy

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    Fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) are currently defined by their anatomical position, expression of non-specific membrane-associated proteins, and ability to adopt multiple lineages in vitro. Gene expression analysis at single-cell level reveals that FAPs undergo dynamic transitions through a spectrum of cell states that can be identified by differential expression levels of Tie2 and Vcam1. Different patterns of Vcam1-negative Tie2highor Tie2lowand Tie2low/Vcam1-expressing FAPs are detected during neonatal myogenesis, response to acute injury and Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD). RNA\ua0sequencing analysis identified cell state-specific transcriptional profiles that predict functional interactions with satellite and inflammatory cells. In particular, Vcam1-expressing FAPs, which exhibit a pro-fibrotic expression profile, are transiently activated by acute injury in concomitance with the inflammatory response. Aberrant persistence of Vcam1-expressing FAPs is detected in DMD muscles or upon macrophage depletion, and is associated with muscle fibrosis, thereby revealing how disruption of inflammation-regulated FAPs dynamics leads to a pathogenic outcome

    Neural-Competent Cells of Adult Human Dermis Belong to the Schwann Lineage

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    SummaryResident neural precursor cells (NPCs) have been reported for a number of adult tissues. Understanding their physiological function or, alternatively, their activation after tissue damage or in vitro manipulation remains an unsolved issue. Here, we investigated the source of human dermal NPCs in adult tissue. By following an unbiased, comprehensive approach employing cell-surface marker screening, cell separation, transcriptomic characterization, and in vivo fate analyses, we found that p75NTR+ precursors of human foreskin can be ascribed to the Schwann (CD56+) and perivascular (CD56−) cell lineages. Moreover, neural differentiation potential was restricted to the p75NTR+CD56+ Schwann cells and mediated by SOX2 expression levels. Double-positive NPCs were similarly obtained from human cardiospheres, indicating that this phenomenon might be widespread

    Neural-competent cells of adult human dermis belong to the Schwann lineage

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    Etxaniz, Usue et al.Resident neural precursor cells (NPCs) have been reported for a number of adult tissues. Understanding their physiological function or, alternatively, their activation after tissue damage or in vitro manipulation remains an unsolved issue. Here, we investigated the source of human dermal NPCs in adult tissue. By following an unbiased, comprehensive approach employing cell-surface marker screening, cell separation, transcriptomic characterization, and in vivo fate analyses, we found that p75NTR+ precursors of human foreskin can be ascribed to the Schwann (CD56+) and perivascular (CD56-) cell lineages. Moreover, neural differentiation potential was restricted to the p75NTR+CD56+ Schwann cells and mediated by SOX2 expression levels. Double-positive NPCs were similarly obtained from human cardiospheres, indicating that this phenomenon might be widespreadThis work was financed by grants provided by Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Instituto de Salud Carlos III [PI13/02172; PI10/ 02871] and INNPACTO [IPT-300000-2010-17] programs), Diputacio®n Foral de Gipuzkoa (OF 30/2014, OF 98/2012, 53/2011, and 94/2008), the European Union (Poctefa-Interreg-IV-A; Refbio13/ Biod/009), and Gobierno Vasco (Saio12-PE12BN010; Saio10- PE10BF01). A.P.-S.V., U.E., and H.I. received studentships from the Department of Education, University and Research of the Basque Government (BFI08-150, BFI10-262, and PRE2013-1-1068, respectively). A.I. was supported by the ‘‘Programa I3SNS’’ (CES09/015) from Instituto de Salud Carlos III and by Osakidetza (Spain)Peer Reviewe

    Schwann Cells in the Ventral Dermis Do Not Derive from Myf5-Expressing Precursors

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    Summary: The embryonic origin of lineage precursors of the trunk dermis is somewhat controversial. Precursor cells traced by Myf5 and Twist2 (Dermo1) promoter activation (i.e., cells of presumed dermomyotomal lineage) have been reported to generate Schwann cells. On the other hand, abundant data demonstrate that dermal Schwann cells derive from the neural crest. This is relevant because dermal precursors give rise to neural lineages, and multilineage differentiation potential qualifies them as adult stem cells. However, it is currently unclear whether neural lineages arise from dedifferentiated Schwann cells instead of mesodermally derived dermal precursor cells. To clarify these discrepancies, we traced SOX2+ adult dermal precursor cells by two independent Myf5 lineage tracing strains. We demonstrate that dermal Schwann cells do not belong to the Myf5+ cell lineage, indicating that previous tracing data reflected aberrant cre recombinase expression and that bona fide Myf5+ dermal precursors cannot transdifferentiate to neural lineages in physiological conditions. : In this article, Izeta, Gutiérrez-Rivera and colleagues solve a controversy regarding how non-neural crest-derived adult dermal precursors are able to commit to peripheral glial fate. Through Myf5+ cell lineage tracing (with two independent strains), in situ localization, and sorting experiments, they demonstrate that aberrant lineage tracing unexpectedly traces dermal Schwann cells. Thus, instead of resident stem/precursor cells, neural-competent cells of adult ventral dermis may just be dedifferentiated Schwann cells. Keywords: dermal stem cell, developmental origin, neural crest, mesoderm, lineage tracing, skin-derived precursors, dedifferentiation, peripheral glia, multilineage differentiation potential, cell fat

    Advanced methods to study the cross talk between fibro-adipogenic progenitors and muscle stem cells

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    Functional interactions between muscle (satellite) stem cells—MuSCs—and other cellular components of their niche (the fibro-adipogenic progenitors—FAPs) coordinate regeneration of injured as well as diseased skeletal muscles. These interactions are largely mediated by secretory networks, whose integrity is critical to determine whether repair occurs by compensatory regeneration leading to formation of new contractile fibers, or by maladaptive formation of fibrotic scars and fat infiltration. Here we provide the description of methods for isolation of FAPs and MuSCs from muscles of wild type and dystrophic mice, and protocols of cocultures as well as MuSC’s exposure to FAP- derived exosomes. These methods and protocols can be exploited in murine models of acute muscle injury to investigate salient features of physiological repair, and in models of muscular diseases to identify dysregulated networks that compromise functional interactions between cellular components of the regeneration environment during disease progression. We predict that exporting these procedures to patient-derived muscle samples will contribute to advance our understanding of human skeletal myogenesis and related disorders

    Muscle denervation promotes functional interactions between glial and mesenchymal cells through NGFR and NGF

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    Summary: We performed scRNA-seq/snATAC-seq of skeletal muscles post sciatic nerve transection to delineate cell type-specific patterns of gene expression/chromatin accessibility at different time points post-denervation. Unlike myotrauma, denervation selectively activates glial cells and Thy1/CD90-expressing mesenchymal cells. Glial cells expressed Ngf receptor (Ngfr) and were located near neuromuscular junctions (NMJs), close to Thy1/CD90-expressing cells, which provided the main cellular source of NGF post-denervation. Functional communication between these cells was mediated by NGF/NGFR, as either recombinant NGF or co-culture with Thy1/CD90-expressing cells could increase glial cell number ex vivo. Pseudo-time analysis in glial cells revealed an initial bifurcation into processes related to either cellular de-differentiation/commitment to specialized cell types (e.g., Schwann cells), or failure to promote nerve regeneration, leading to extracellular matrix remodeling toward fibrosis. Thus, interactions between denervation-activated Thy1/CD90-expressing and glial cells represent an early abortive process toward NMJs repair, ensued by the conversion of denervated muscles into an environment hostile for NMJ repair

    Denervation-activated STAT3–IL-6 signalling in fibro-adipogenic progenitors promotes myofibres atrophy and fibrosis

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    Fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) are typically activated in response to muscle injury, and establish functional interactions with inflammatory and muscle stem cells (MuSCs) to promote muscle repair. We found that denervation causes progressive accumulation of FAPs, without concomitant infiltration of macrophages and MuSC-mediated regeneration. Denervation-activated FAPs exhibited persistent STAT3 activation and secreted elevated levels of IL-6, which promoted muscle atrophy and fibrosis. FAPs with aberrant activation of STAT3–IL-6 signalling were also found in mouse models of spinal cord injury, spinal muscular atrophy, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and in muscles of ALS patients. Inactivation of STAT3–IL-6 signalling in FAPs effectively countered muscle atrophy and fibrosis in mouse models of acute denervation and ALS (SODG93Amice). Activation of pathogenic FAPs following loss of integrity of neuromuscular junctions further illustrates the functional versatility of FAPs in response to homeostatic perturbations and suggests their potential contribution to the pathogenesis of neuromuscular diseases

    Denervation-activated STAT3-IL-6 signalling in fibro-adipogenic progenitors promotes myofibres atrophy and fibrosis

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    Fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) are typically activated in response to muscle injury, and establish functional interactions with inflammatory and muscle stem cells (MuSCs) to promote muscle repair. We found that denervation causes progressive accumulation of FAPs, without concomitant infiltration of macrophages and MuSC-mediated regeneration. Denervation-activated FAPs exhibited persistent STAT3 activation and secreted elevated levels of IL-6, which promoted muscle atrophy and fibrosis. FAPs with aberrant activation of STAT3-IL-6 signalling were also found in mouse models of spinal cord injury, spinal muscular atrophy, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and in muscles of ALS patients. Inactivation of STAT3-IL-6 signalling in FAPs effectively countered muscle atrophy and fibrosis in mouse models of acute denervation and ALS (SODG93A mice). Activation of pathogenic FAPs following loss of integrity of neuromuscular junctions further illustrates the functional versatility of FAPs in response to homeostatic perturbations and suggests their potential contribution to the pathogenesis of neuromuscular diseases
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