Recruitment of bone-marrow-derived cells by skeletal and cardiac muscle in adult dystrophic mdx mice

被引:0
|
作者
R. E. Bittner
Christian Schöfer
Klara Weipoltshammer
Silva Ivanova
Berthold Streubel
Erwin Hauser
Michael Freilinger
Harald Höger
Adelheid Elbe-Bürger
Franz Wachtler
机构
[1] Institute of Anatomy,
[2] Department 3,undefined
[3] University of Vienna,undefined
[4] Währingerstrasse 13,undefined
[5] A-1090 Vienna,undefined
[6] Austria e-mail: reginald.bittner@univie.ac.at,undefined
[7] Tel.: +43-1-4277-61182,undefined
[8] Fax: +43-1-4277-61198,undefined
[9] Institute of Histology and Embryology,undefined
[10] University of Vienna,undefined
[11] Schwarzspanierstrasse 17,undefined
[12] A-1090 Vienna,undefined
[13] Austria,undefined
[14] Clinic of Pediatrics,undefined
[15] Vienna Medical School,undefined
[16] University of Vienna,undefined
[17] Währinger Gürtel 18–20,undefined
[18] A-1090 Vienna,undefined
[19] Austria,undefined
[20] Research Institute for Laboratory Animal Breeding,undefined
[21] University of Vienna,undefined
[22] Brauhausgasse 34,undefined
[23] A-2325 Himberg,undefined
[24] Austria,undefined
[25] Department of Dermatology,undefined
[26] Division of Immunology,undefined
[27] Allergy and Infectious Diseases,undefined
[28] University of Vienna Medical School,undefined
[29] Vienna International Research Cooperation Center,undefined
[30] Brunner Str. 59,undefined
[31] A-1235 Vienna,undefined
[32] Austria,undefined
来源
Anatomy and Embryology | 1999年 / 199卷
关键词
Key words Dystrophin deficient; mdx mouse; Duchenne muscular dystrophy; Satellite cells; Muscle regeneration; Cardiac muscle; Bone marrow transplantation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
 It is commonly accepted, that regenerative capacity of striated muscle is confined to skeletal muscle by activation of satellite cells that normally reside quiescent between the plasmalemma and the basement membrane of muscle fibers. Muscular dystrophies are characterized by repetitive cycles of de- and regeneration of skeletal muscle fibers and by the frequent involvement of the cardiac muscle. Since during the longstanding course of muscular dystrophies there is a permanent demand of myogenic progenitors we hypothesized that this may necessitate a recruitment of additional myogenic precursors from an undifferentiated, permanently renewed cell pool, such as bone marrow (BM) cells. To this end normal and dystrophic (mdx) female mice received bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from normal congenic male donor mice. After 70 days, histological sections of skeletal and cardiac muscle from BMT mice were probed for the donor-derived Y chromosomes. In normal BMT recipients, no Y chromosome-containing myonuclei were detected, either in skeletal or in cardiac muscle. However, in all samples from dystrophic mdx skeletal muscles Y chromosome-specific signals were detected within muscle fiber nuclei, which additionally were found to express the myoregulatory proteins myogenin and myf-5. Moreover, in the hearts of BMT-mdx mice single cardiomyocytes with donor derived nuclei were identified, indicating, that even cardiac muscle cells are able to regenerate by recruitment of circulating BM-derived progenitors. Our findings suggest that further characterization and identification of the BM cells capable of undergoing myogenic differentiation may have an outstanding impact on therapeutic strategies for diseases of skeletal and cardiac muscle.
引用
收藏
页码:391 / 396
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Myocardial regeneration with bone-marrow-derived stem cells
    Yoon, YS
    Lee, N
    Scadova, H
    BIOLOGY OF THE CELL, 2005, 97 (04) : 253 - 263
  • [32] Bone-marrow-derived cells implicated in gastric cancer
    Bosch, X
    LANCET ONCOLOGY, 2005, 6 (01): : 8 - 8
  • [33] CHARACTERIZATION OF HUMAN BONE-MARROW-DERIVED OSTEOPROGENITOR CELLS
    LONG, MW
    HAMILTON, JA
    ASHCRAFT, E
    MANN, KG
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 1993, 8 : S363 - S363
  • [34] Contribution of Human Muscle-Derived Cells to Skeletal Muscle Regeneration in Dystrophic Host Mice
    Meng, Jinhong
    Adkin, Carl F.
    Xu, Shi-wen
    Muntoni, Francesco
    Morgan, Jennifer E.
    PLOS ONE, 2011, 6 (03):
  • [35] Signals from damaged but not undamaged skeletal muscle induce myogenic differentiation of rat bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells
    Santa María, L
    Rojas, CV
    Minguell, JJ
    EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH, 2004, 300 (02) : 418 - 426
  • [36] Skeletal muscle differentiation potential of human adult bone marrow cells
    Bossolasco, P
    Corti, S
    Strazzer, S
    Borsotti, C
    Del Bo, R
    Fortunato, F
    Salani, S
    Quirici, N
    Bertolini, F
    Gobbi, A
    Deliliers, GL
    Comi, GP
    Soligo, D
    EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH, 2004, 295 (01) : 66 - 78
  • [37] ABNORMALITIES IN STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF LIMB SKELETAL-MUSCLE FIBERS OF DYSTROPHIC MDX MICE
    HEAD, SI
    WILLIAMS, DA
    STEPHENSON, DG
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1992, 248 (1322) : 163 - 169
  • [38] One-year Treatment of Morpholino Antisense Oligomer Improves Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle Functions in Dystrophic mdx Mice
    Wu, Bo
    Xiao, Bin
    Cloer, Caryn
    Shaban, Mona
    Sali, Arpana
    Lu, Peijuan
    Li, Juan
    Nagaraju, Kanneboyina
    Xiao, Xiao
    Lu, Qi Long
    MOLECULAR THERAPY, 2011, 19 (03) : 576 - 583
  • [39] Macrophages fine tune satellite cell fate in dystrophic skeletal muscle of mdx mice
    Madaro, Luca
    Torcinaro, Alessio
    De Bardi, Marco
    Contino, Federica F.
    Pelizzola, Mattia
    Diaferia, Giuseppe R.
    Imeneo, Giulia
    Bouche, Marina
    Puri, Pier Lorenzo
    De Santa, Francesca
    PLOS GENETICS, 2019, 15 (10):
  • [40] Impaired recruitment of bone-marrow-derived endothelial and hematopoietic precursor cells blocks tumor angiogenesis and growth
    Lyden, D
    Hattori, K
    Dias, S
    Costa, C
    Blaikie, P
    Butros, L
    Chadburn, A
    Heissig, B
    Marks, W
    Witte, L
    Wu, Y
    Hicklin, D
    Zhu, ZP
    Hackett, NR
    Crystal, RG
    Moore, MAS
    Hajjar, KA
    Manova, K
    Benezra, R
    Rafii, S
    NATURE MEDICINE, 2001, 7 (11) : 1194 - 1201