Prospective Isolation of Skeletal Muscle Stem Cells with a Pax7 Reporter

Bosnakovski, Darko and Xu, Zhaohui and Li, Wei and Thet, Suwannee and Cleaver, Ondine and Perlingeiro, Rita C. R. and Kyba, Michael (2008) Prospective Isolation of Skeletal Muscle Stem Cells with a Pax7 Reporter. Stem Cells, 26. pp. 3194-3204.

[thumbnail of 9.bib] Text
9.bib

Download (390B)
[thumbnail of Prospective Isolation of Skeletal Muscle Stem Cells with a Pax7 Reporter.pdf]
Preview
Text
Prospective Isolation of Skeletal Muscle Stem Cells with a Pax7 Reporter.pdf

Download (2MB) | Preview

Abstract

Muscle regeneration occurs through activation of quiescent satellite cells whose progeny proliferate, differentiate, and fuse to make new myofibers. We used a transgenic Pax7-ZsGreen reporter mouse to prospectively isolate stem cells of skeletal muscle by flow cytometry. We show that Pax7-expressing cells (satellite cells) in the limb, head, and diaphragm muscles are homogeneous in size and granularity and uniformly labeled by certain cell surface markers, including CD34 and CD29. The frequency of the satellite cells varies between muscle types and with age. Clonal analysis demonstrated that all colonies arising from single cells within the Pax7-sorted fraction have myogenic potential. In response to injury, Pax7(+) cells reduce CD34, CD29, and CXCR4 expression, increase in size, and acquire Sca-1. When directly isolated and cultured in vitro, Pax7(+) cells display the hallmarks of activation and proliferate, initially as suspension aggregates and later distributed between suspension and adherence. During in vitro expansion, Pax7 (ZsGreen) and CD34 expression decline, whereas expression of PSA-NCAM is acquired. The nonmyogenic, Pax7(neg) cells expand as Sca1(+) PDGRalpha(+) PSA-NCAM(neg) cells. Satellite cells expanded exclusively in suspension can engraft and produce dystrophin(+) fibers in mdx(-/-) mice. These results establish a novel animal model for the study of muscle stem cell physiology and a culture system for expansion of engraftable muscle progenitors.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Medical and Health Sciences > Basic medicine
Divisions: Faculty of Medical Science
Depositing User: Darko Bosnakovski
Date Deposited: 30 Nov 2012 14:25
Last Modified: 08 Feb 2013 09:05
URI: https://eprints.ugd.edu.mk/id/eprint/2530

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item