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Fetal muscle contains different CD34+ cell subsets that distinctly differentiate into adipogenic, angiogenic and myogenic lineages. Stem Cell Res 2011; 7:230-43. [PMID: 21907166 DOI: 10.1016/j.scr.2011.06.004] [Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/19/2011] [Revised: 06/17/2011] [Accepted: 06/21/2011] [Indexed: 11/29/2022] Open
Abstract
We have previously demonstrated that CD34(+) cells isolated from fetal mouse muscles are an interesting source of myogenic progenitors. In the present work, we pinpoint the tissue location of these CD34(+) cells using cell surface and phenotype markers. In order to identify the myogenic population, we next purified different CD34(+) subsets, determined their expression of relevant lineage-related genes, and analyzed their differentiation capacities in vitro and in vivo. The CD34(+) population comprised a CD31(+)/CD45(-) cell subset exhibiting endothelial characteristics and only capable of forming microvessels in vivo. The CD34(+)/CD31(-)/CD45(-)/Sca1(+) subpopulation, which is restricted to the muscle epimysium, displayed adipogenic differentiation both in vitro and in vivo. CD34(+)/CD31(-)/CD45(-)/Sca1(-) cells, localized in the muscle interstitium, transcribed myogenic genes, but did not display the characteristics of adult satellite cells. These cells were distinct from pericytes and fibroblasts. They were myogenic in vitro, and efficiently contributed to skeletal muscle regeneration in vivo, although their myogenic potential was lower than that of the unfractionated CD34(+) cell population. Our results indicate that angiogenic and adipogenic cells grafted with myogenic cells enhance their contribution to myogenic regeneration, highlighting the fundamental role of the microenvironment on the fate of transplanted cells.
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Fetal muscle-derived cells can repair dystrophic muscles in mdx mice. Exp Cell Res 2007; 313:997-1007. [PMID: 17275812 DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2006.12.021] [Citation(s) in RCA: 9] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/04/2006] [Revised: 12/18/2006] [Accepted: 12/27/2006] [Indexed: 10/23/2022]
Abstract
We have previously reported that CD34(+) cells purified from mouse fetal muscles can differentiate into skeletal muscle in vitro and in vivo when injected into muscle tissue of dystrophic mdx mice. In this study, we investigate the ability of such donor cells to restore dystrophin expression, and to improve the functional muscle capacity of the extensor digitorum longus muscle (EDL) of mdx mice. For this purpose green fluorescent-positive fetal GFP(+)/CD34(+) cells or desmin(+)/(-)LacZ/CD34(+) cells were transplanted into irradiated or non-irradiated mdx EDL muscle. Donor fetal muscle-derived cells predominantly fused with existing fibers. Indeed more than 50% of the myofibers of the host EDL contained donor nuclei delivering dystrophin along 80-90% of the length of their sarcolemma. The presence of significant amounts of dystrophin (about 60-70% of that found in a control wild-type mouse muscle) was confirmed by Western blot analyses. Dystrophin expression also outcompeted that of utrophin, as revealed by a spatial shift in the distribution of utrophin. At 1 month post-transplant, the recipient muscle appeared to have greater resistance to fatigue than control mdx EDL muscle during repeated maximal contractions.
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Soluble factors from neuronal cultures induce a specific proliferation and resistance to apoptosis of cognate mouse skeletal muscle precursor cells. Neurosci Lett 2006; 407:20-5. [PMID: 16959418 DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2006.06.076] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/11/2006] [Revised: 06/07/2006] [Accepted: 06/07/2006] [Indexed: 12/13/2022]
Abstract
The mechanisms or the physiological events, which control the regeneration of skeletal muscle through muscle precursor cell multiplication and differentiation, are still largely unknown. To address the question of the involvement of neurons in this process, skeletal muscle progenitors were grown in the presence of conditioned media obtained from 3-day-old cultures of embryonic neurons (derived from either the dorsal or the ventral region of 11-day-old mouse embryos) or media conditioned with satellite cells. Strikingly, only satellite cells cultured in medium conditioned from ventral embryonic neurons exhibited increased proliferation, as well as resistance to staurosporine (STS)-induced apoptosis. Our results suggest the existence of specific anti-apoptogenic neural soluble signals, which could be involved in skeletal muscle regeneration pathways.
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Abstract
Embryonic chimera production was used to study the developmental processes of the mouse nervous system. The difficulty of performing in situ transplantation experiments of neural primordium of mouse embryo was overcome by isotopic and isochronic grafting of mouse neural tube fragments into chick embryo. Mouse neural tube cells differentiated perfectly in ovo and neural crest cells associated with the grafted neural tube were able to migrate and reach the normal arrest sites of host neural crests. Cranial neural crest cells penetrated into chick facial areas and entered into the development of dental bud structures, participating in vibrissa formation. Depending on graft level, in ovo implanted mouse neural crest cells formed different components of the peripheral nervous system. At trunk level, they located in spinal ganglia and orthosympathetic chains and gave rise to Schwann cells lining the nerves. When implanted into the lumbosacral region, they penetrated into the enteric nervous system. At the precise 18-24 somite level, they colonized host adrenal gland. Mouse neural tube was involved in the mechanisms required to maintain myogenesis in host somites. Furthermore in ovo grafts of mouse cells from genetically modified embryos, in which many mutations induce early death, are particularly useful to investigate cellular events involved in the development of the nervous system and to identify molecular events of embryogenesis.
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Endothelial cells within embryonic skeletal muscles: a potential source of myogenic progenitors. Exp Cell Res 2005; 301:232-41. [PMID: 15530859 DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2004.07.028] [Citation(s) in RCA: 21] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/07/2004] [Revised: 07/26/2004] [Indexed: 11/30/2022]
Abstract
We investigated whether the vessel-associated or endothelial cells within mouse embryo muscles can be a source of myogenic progenitors. Immunodetection of the stem cell surface markers, CD34 and Flk1, which are known to characterize the endothelial lineage, was done throughout the course of embryo muscle development. Both markers appeared to be restricted to the vessel-associated cells. On the basis of CD34 labeling, the reactive cells were purified by magnetic-bead selection from the limb muscles of 17-dpc desmin+/-LacZ mouse embryos and characterized by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. The cells in the selected CD34(+) population appeared to be approximately 95% positive for Flk1, but usually negative for CD45. We demonstrated that in vitro the CD34(+)/Flk1(+) population differentiated into endothelial cells and skeletal myofibers. When transplanted into mdx mouse muscle, this population displayed a high propensity to disperse within the recipient muscle, fuse with the host myofibers, and restore dystrophin expression. The marked ability of the embryonic muscle endothelial cells to activate myogenic program could be related to their somitic origin.
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Developmental behavior of embryonic myogenic progenitors transplanted into adult muscle as revealed by desmin LacZ recombinant gene. J Histochem Cytochem 2003; 51:1255-67. [PMID: 14500693 DOI: 10.1177/002215540305101002] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022] Open
Abstract
We studied the behavior of myogenic progenitors from donor desmin(+/-) LacZ embryos after implantation into tibialis anterior muscle of 2-month-old mouse hosts. Myogenic progenitors were collected from 10-day post-coital mouse embryo somite dermomyotomes (DMs), forelimb buds (LBs), and trunks. The replacement of desmin by the LacZ coding sequence allowed specific monitoring of beta-galactosidase expression in donor myogenic cells. Immunostaining for myosin heavy chain and laminin expression was performed together with acetylcholine receptor histochemistry on sections of implanted muscle. Myogenic progenitors generated from DM, LB, and trunk were able to proliferate and adopt a myogenic pathway after transplantation into adult mouse muscle. Although their development appeared to be limited for DM and LB cell transplantation, the differentiation of myogenic progenitors occurred readily with trunk cell injection, suggesting that cell types associated with DM cells were involved in long-term myofiber differentiation (21 day). When neural tube/notochord (NTN) or sclerotomal (S) cells were co-transplanted with DM cells, myogenic nuclei were produced, indicating that both NTN and S are required for the differentiation of DMs grafted into adult muscle. These data are consistent with the differentiation of neural tissues and bone from NTN and S, respectively, and with the development of anatomic relations among all in vivo-differentiated tissues. These results suggest that embryonic trunk cells can be used to repair different types of injured tissues (especially skeletal muscle) under appropriate environmental conditions.
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[Implications of environmental cues in cardiomyogenesis]. JOURNAL DE LA SOCIETE DE BIOLOGIE 2003; 197:169-78. [PMID: 12910632] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 03/04/2023]
Abstract
The staging of murine cardiomyocyte specification and determination was investigated in cultures of tissue explants from pre- and postgastrulation embryos and after transplantation of cardiac or cardiogenic tissues from mouse embryos into chick embryos. The development of cultured and transplanted cells in cardiomyocytes was evaluated by testing the expression of several cardiac transcription factor genes (Nkx 2.5, eHAND, dHAND, GATA 4), alpha cardiac actin, and beta myosin heavy chain protein. In vitro analyses showed that cells with the potential to form cardiac muscle were present prior to gastrulation in 6.5-day postconception (dpc) epiblasts. Although, as shown by in vivo experiments, neurectodermal derived structures did not influence cardiogenesis in epiblast transplants, these transplants did not exhibit full cardiogenic cell differentiation in the chicken environment. In in vitro culture, the neurectoderm also had no effect on murine cardiomyogenesis. In contrast, the presence of endoderm in explants between mid- and late streak stages stimulated emerging mesodermal cells to adopt a myocardial pathway. Mesoderm from late streak explants (7.5 dpc) was capable of differentiating into a cardiac phenotype in the avian heterotopic environment, indicating that the specification of cardiac precursors became irreversible around the late streak stage in mouse embryo.
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Development of teeth in chick embryos after mouse neural crest transplantations. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2003; 100:6541-5. [PMID: 12740432 PMCID: PMC164482 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1137104100] [Citation(s) in RCA: 79] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/18/2022] Open
Abstract
Teeth were lost in birds 70-80 million years ago. Current thinking holds that it is the avian cranial neural crest-derived mesenchyme that has lost odontogenic capacity, whereas the oral epithelium retains the signaling properties required to induce odontogenesis. To investigate the odontogenic capacity of ectomesenchyme, we have used neural tube transplantations from mice to chick embryos to replace the chick neural crest cell populations with mouse neural crest cells. The mouse/chick chimeras obtained show evidence of tooth formation showing that avian oral epithelium is able to induce a nonavian developmental program in mouse neural crest-derived mesenchymal cells.
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Abstract
The expression of the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger was studied in differentiating muscle fibers in rats. NCX1 and NCX3 isoform (Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger isoform) expression was found to be developmentally regulated. NCX1 mRNA and protein levels peaked shortly after birth. Conversely, NCX3 isoform expression was very low in muscles of newborn rats but increased dramatically during the first 2 wk of postnatal life. Immunocytochemical analysis showed that NCX1 was uniformly distributed along the sarcolemmal membrane of undifferentiated rat muscle fibers but formed clusters in T-tubular membranes and sarcolemma of adult muscle. NCX3 appeared to be more uniformly distributed along the sarcolemma and inside myoplasm. In the adult, NCX1 was predominantly expressed in oxidative (type 1 and 2A) fibers of both slow- and fast-twitch muscles, whereas NCX3 was highly expressed in fast glycolytic (2B) fibers. NCX2 was expressed in rat brain but not in skeletal muscle. Developmental changes in NCX1 and NCX3 as well as the distribution of these isoforms at the cellular level and in different fiber types suggest that they may have different physiological roles.
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Abstract
The staging of murine cardiomyocyte specification and determination was investigated in cultures of tissue explants from pre- and postgastrulated embryos and after transplantation of cardiac or cardiogenic tissues from mouse embryos into 2-day-old chick embryos in different locations. The development of transplanted and cultured cells in cardiomyocytes was evaluated by testing the expression of several cardiac transcription factor genes (Nkx 2.5, eHAND, dHAND, GATA-4), alpha-cardiac actin mRNA, and beta-myosin heavy chain protein. In vitro analyses showed that cells with the potential to form cardiac muscle were present prior to gastrulation in 6.5-day postconception (dpc) epiblasts, as indicated by the expression of Nkx 2.5, eHAND, dHAND, and GATA-4 cardiac transcription factors; desmin transgene; alpha-cardiac actin; and beta-myosin heavy chain. Conversely, epiblasts transplanted into the chicken somitic environment did not exhibit full cardiogenic cell differentiation. It was determined that chick host axial structures did not influence cardiogenesis in transplants. Mesoderm from late streak explants was capable of differentiating into the cardiac phenotype in the avian heterotopic environment, indicating that the specification of cardiac precursors (under way by 6.5 dpc) became irreversible at around the late streak stage in mouse embryo. Although in vitro analyses showed that interaction with endoderm is not required for the specification of murine cardiac cells, the presence of endoderm in explant cultures between mid- and late streak stages stimulated emerging mesodermal cells to adopt a myocardial pathway, whereas ectoderm had no influence on cardiomyogenesis.
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The expression of the homeobox gene Msx1 reveals two populations of dermal progenitor cells originating from the somites. Development 2000; 127:2155-64. [PMID: 10769239 DOI: 10.1242/dev.127.10.2155] [Citation(s) in RCA: 32] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022]
Abstract
Experimental manipulation in birds has shown that trunk dermis has a double origin: dorsally, it derives from the somite dermomyotome, while ventrally, it is formed by the somatopleure. Taking advantage of an nlacZ reporter gene integrated into the mouse Msx1 locus (Msx1(nlacZ) allele), we detected segmental expression of the Msx1 gene in cells of the dorsal mesenchyme of the trunk between embryonic days 11 and 14. Replacing somites from a chick host embryo by murine Msx1(nlacZ)somites allowed us to demonstrate that these Msx1-(beta)-galactosidase positive cells are of somitic origin. We propose that these cells are dermal progenitor cells that migrate from the somites and subsequently contribute to the dorsalmost dermis. By analysing Msx1(nlacZ) expression in a Splotch mutant, we observed that migration of these cells does not depend on Pax3, in contrast to other migratory populations such as limb muscle progenitor cells and neural crest cells. Msx1 expression was never detected in cells overlying the dermomyotome, although these cells are also of somitic origin. Therefore, we propose that two somite-derived populations of dermis progenitor cells can be distinguished. Cells expressing the Msx1 gene would migrate from the somite and contribute to the dermis of the dorsalmost trunk region. A second population of cells would disaggregate from the somite and contribute to the dermis overlying the dermomyotome. This population never expresses Msx1. Msx1 expression was investigated in the context of the onset of dermis formation monitored by the Dermo1 gene expression. The gene is downregulated prior to the onset of dermis differentiation, suggesting a role for Msx1 in the control of this process.
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Abstract
As the mammalian embryo is implanted in the uterus and not readily accessible to direct observation or manipulation, much of our understanding of mammalian somite development is based on findings in lower vertebrates. One means of overcoming the difficulties raised by intrauterine development is to engraft mouse tissue in ovo. The experiments described in this chapter relate to the unilateral replacement of somites in chick embryo with those from mouse fetus. Mouse somites differentiate in ovo in dermis, cartilage, and skeletal muscle and are able to migrate into chick host limb. A LacZ transgenic mouse strain was used to ascertain the role of the implanted somites in forming epaxial and hypaxial muscle in the chick embryo. Myogenesis occurred normally in in ovo developing mouse somites, and muscle cells from mouse myotome formed neuromuscular contacts with chick motor axons. After fragments of fetal mouse neural primordium were transplanted into chick embryo, mouse neural tube contributed to the mechanism maintaining myogenesis in the somites of the host embryo. A recently developed double-grafting procedure involving neural tube and somites from knockout mouse strains should elucidate the molecular events involved in early somitogenesis.
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The homeobox gene Msx1 is expressed in a subset of somites, and in muscle progenitor cells migrating into the forelimb. Development 1999; 126:2689-701. [PMID: 10331980 DOI: 10.1242/dev.126.12.2689] [Citation(s) in RCA: 74] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022]
Abstract
In myoblast cell cultures, the Msx1 protein is able to repress myogenesis and maintain cells in an undifferentiated and proliferative state. However, there has been no evidence that Msx1 is expressed in muscle or its precursors in vivo. Using mice with the nlacZ gene integrated into the Msx1 locus, we show that the reporter gene is expressed in the lateral dermomyotome of brachial and thoracic somites. Cells from this region will subsequently contribute to forelimb and intercostal muscles. Using Pax3 gene transcripts as a marker of limb muscle progenitor cells as they migrate from the somites, we have defined precisely the somitic origin and timing of cell migration from somites to limb buds in the mouse. Differences in the timing of migration between chick and mouse are discussed. Somites that label for Msx1(nlacZ)transgene expression in the forelimb region partially overlap with those that contribute Pax3-expressing cells to the forelimb. In order to see whether Msx1 is expressed in this migrating population, we have grafted somites from the forelimb level of Msx1(nlacZ)mouse embryos into a chick host embryo. We show that most cells migrating into the wing field express the Msx1(nlacZ)transgene, together with Pax3. In these experiments, Msx1 expression in the somite depends on the axial position of the graft. Wing mesenchyme is capable of inducing Msx1 transcription in somites that normally would not express the gene; chick hindlimb mesenchyme, while permissive for this expression, does not induce it. In the mouse limb bud, the Msx1(nlacZ)transgene is downregulated prior to the activation of the Myf5 gene, an early marker of myogenic differentiation. These observations are consistent with the proposal that Msx1 is involved in the repression of muscle differentiation in the lateral half of the somite and in limb muscle progenitor cells during their migration.
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Blood borne macrophages are essential for the triggering of muscle regeneration following muscle transplant. Neuromuscul Disord 1999; 9:72-80. [PMID: 10220861 DOI: 10.1016/s0960-8966(98)00111-4] [Citation(s) in RCA: 132] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/17/2022]
Abstract
The transplantation of satellite cells may constitute a strategy for rebuilding muscle fibres in inherited myopathies. However, its development requires a great understanding of the role of environmental signals in the regenerative process. It is therefore essential to identify the key events triggering and controlling this process in vivo. We investigated whether macrophages play a key role in the course of the regenerative process using skeletal muscle transplants from transgenic pHuDes-nls-LacZ mice. Before grafting, transplants were conditioned with macrophage inflammatory protein 1-beta (MIP 1-beta; stimulating the macrophages infiltration or vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) stimulating angiogenesis). Treatment of transplants with MIP 1-beta and VEGF both accelerated and augmented monocyte-macrophage infiltration and satellite cell differentiation and/or proliferation, as compared to controls. In addition, VEGF treatment enhanced the number of newly formed myotubes. When a complete depletion of host monocyte-macrophages was experimentally induced, no regeneration occurred in transplants. Our data suggest that the presence of blood borne macrophages is required for triggering the earliest events of skeletal muscle regeneration. The understanding of macrophage behaviour after muscle injury should allow us to develop future strategies of satellite cell transplantation as a treatment for muscular dystrophies.
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MyoD, myogenin, and desmin-nls-lacZ transgene emphasize the distinct patterns of satellite cell activation in growth and regeneration. Exp Cell Res 1998; 243:241-53. [PMID: 9743584 DOI: 10.1006/excr.1998.4100] [Citation(s) in RCA: 49] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/23/2023]
Abstract
Although satellite cell differentiation is involved in postnatal myogenesis from growth to posttrauma regeneration, the early stages of this process remain unclear. This study investigated pHuDes-nls-lacZ transgene activity, as revealed by X-gal staining and the accumulation of MyoD, myogenin, endogenous desmin, and myosin, in order to determine whether satellite cells share the same activation program during growth and regeneration. After birth, skeletal myonuclei in which myogenin expression was limited were briefly characterized by transgene activity. Satellite cells were only evidenced by MyoD and slow myosin accumulation, but failed to initiate transgene expression. After freeze trauma, satellite cell activation led to MyoD, myogenin, and desmin expression. Subsequently, when myosin expression occurred, transgene activation was apparent in regenerating structures, with more intense X-gal staining in mononucleated cells than regenerating myotubes. After the second week posttrauma, only desmin and myogenin expression were maintained in regenerating structures. In culture, the behavior of satellite cells showed that desmin expression was committed before transgene activation occurred, i.e., concurrently with MyoD, myogenin, myosin expression, and the first fusion events. Quantitative analysis confirmed the discrepancy between endogenous desmin and transgene expression and demonstrated the close correlation between transgene activation and the fusion index. Our results strongly suggest that satellite cells promote distinct pathways of myogenic response during growth and regeneration.
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Desmin-lacZ transgene expression and regeneration within skeletal muscle transplants. J Muscle Res Cell Motil 1997; 18:631-41. [PMID: 9429157 DOI: 10.1023/a:1018679722112] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/05/2023]
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the initiation and time course of the regeneration process in fragments of skeletal muscle transplants as a function of muscle tissue age at implantation. The appearance of desmin occurs at the very beginning of myogenesis. The transgenic desmin nls lacZ mice used in the study bear a transgene in which the 1 kb DNA 5' regulatory sequence of the desmin gene is linked to a reporter gene coding for Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase. The desmin lacZ transgene labels muscle cells in which the desmin synthesis programme has commenced. We implanted pectoralis muscle fragments from fetal transgenic embryos and mature and old transgenic mice into mature non-transgenic mice. Early events of myogenesis occurring during regeneration started sooner in transplants from 4-month-old (day 3 post-implantation) muscle than in those from 24-month-old (day 5-6 post-implantation) muscle, and they lasted longer in those from young (day 17 post-implantation) than in those from old (day 14 post-implantation) muscle fragments. In adult muscle, transgene activation proceeded from the periphery toward the centre of the transplant. In transplants from fetal 18-day-old pectoralis, myotubes with transgene activity were observed from day 1 to day 19. Desmin immunoreactivity, which appeared about one day after transgene activation, was followed by myosin expression. In adult transplants, the continuity of laminin labelling was disrupted around degenerative fibres, illustrating alteration of the extracellular matrix. Our data suggest that satellite cells from old muscle tissue have lower proliferative capacity and/or less access to trophic substances released by the host (damaged fibres, vascularization) than those from fetal or young adult muscle.
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Abstract
This study investigated possible interactions between motoneurons and somitic-derived muscle cells in the formation of neuromuscular synapses in the myotome. The peculiarities of the neuromuscular synaptic pattern in chick and mouse embryos provided a model for studying the achievement of synaptogenesis between chick motoneurons and mouse muscle cells. In chick embryo, initial AChR clustering occurs well before innervation of the myotome, whereas in mouse embryo nerve axons invade the myotome extensively before the appearance of AChR clusters. Our approach was to replace somites from a chick host embryo with those derived from mouse donor embryos. We show that muscle cells from mouse myotome can differentiate in the chick embryo environment and form neuromuscular contacts with chick motor axons. Host axons invaded in ovo differentiating mouse myotome at a time when they had not yet reached the host myotome. This particular ingrowth of motor nerves was attributable to the mouse transplant since use of a quail somite did not produce the same effect as the mouse somite, which suggests that developing mouse muscles specifically modify the time course of chick axogenesis. The synaptic areas formed between chick motor axons and mouse myotubes developed according to the mouse pattern. Both the timing of their appearance and their morphology correlated perfectly with events in mouse synaptogenesis. These results indicate the important role played by postsynaptic membrane in controlling the first steps of AChR formation.
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Abstract
Chimeras were prepared by transplanting fragments of neural primordium from 8- to 8.5- and 9-day postcoital mouse embryos into 1.5- and 2-day-old chick embryos at different axial levels. Mouse neuroepithelial cells differentiated in ovo and organized to form the different cellular compartments normally constituting the central nervous system.The graft also entered into the development of the peripheral nervous system through migration of neural crest cells associated with mouse neuroepithelium. Depending on the graft level, mouse crest cells participated in the formation of various derivatives such as head components, sensory ganglia, orthosympathetic ganglionic chain, nerves and neuroendocrine glands. Tenascin knockout mice, which express lacZ instead of tenascin and show no tenascin production (Saga, Y., Yagi, J., Ikawa, Y., Sakakura, T. and Aizawa, S. (1992) Genes and Development 6, 1821–1838), were specifically used to label Schwann cells lining nerves derived from the implant. Although our experiments do not consider how mouse neural tube can participate in the mechanism required to maintain myogenesis in the host somites, they show that the grafted neural tube behaves in the same manner as the chick host neural tube. Together with our previous results on somite development (Fontaine-Perus, J., Jarno, V., Fournier Le Ray, C., Li, Z. and Paulin, D. (1995) Development 121, 1705–1718), this study shows that chick embryo constitutes a privileged environment, facilitating access to the developmental potentials of normal or defective mammalian cells. It allows the study of the histogenesis and precise timing of a known structure, as well as the implication of a given gene at all equivalent mammalian embryonic stages.
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Abstract
The influence of innervation on primary and secondary myogenesis and its relation to fiber type diversity were investigated in two specific wing muscles of quail embryo, the posterior (PLD) and anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD). In the adult, these muscles are composed almost exclusively of pure populations of fast and slow fibers, respectively. When slow ALD and fast PLD muscles developed in ovo in an aneurogenic environment induced after neural tube ablation, the cardiac ventricular myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform was not expressed. The adult slow MHC isoform, SM2, appeared by embryonic day 7 (ED 7) in normal innervated slow ALD but was not expressed in denervated muscle. Analysis of in vitro differentiation of myoblasts from fast PLD and slow ALD muscles isolated from ED 7 control and neuralectomized quail embryos showed no fundamental differences in the pattern of MHC isoform expression. Newly differentiated fibers accumulated cardiac ventricular, embryonic fast, slow SM1 and SM3 MHC isoforms. Nevertheless, the expression of slow SM2 isoform in myotubes formed from slow ALD myoblasts only occurred when myoblasts were cultured in the presence of embryonic spinal cord. Our studies demonstrate that the neural tube influences primary as well as secondary myotube differentiation in avian forelimb and facilitates the expression of different MHC, particularly slow SM2 MHC gene expression in slow myoblasts.
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Abstract
We investigated the role of the neural tube in muscle cell differentiation in developing somitic myotome of chick embryo, particularly through fast myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform expression. An embryonic fast MHC labeled with EB165 mAb was expressed in somitic cells from stage 15 of Hamburger and Hamilton (H.H.) (24 somites). Moreover, a distinct early embryonic fast MHC was expressed only from stage 15 of H.H. to stage 36 (E10). Like neonatal MHC, this isoform was labeled with 2E9 mAb but differed in its immunopeptide mapping. Expression of EB165-labeled embryonic fast MHC occurred in somitic myotomes deprived of neural tube influence by in ovo ablation as well as in somite explants cultured alone in vitro. Conversely, ablation of the neural tube prevented somitic expression of MHC labeled with 2E9 mAb. The neural tube induced in vitro expression of this MHC in explants of somites which failed to express it when cultured alone. These results indicate that signals emanating from the neural tube are required for the expression of early embryonic fast MHC isoform in developing somitic myotome.
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Abstract
Interspecific grafting experiments between chick and quail embryos were carried out to investigate the differentiation capacities of myoblasts from different development stages. Grafts consisted of 3.5-day-old embryonic quail dermomyotomes isolated from the cranial level, 7- to 10-day-old and 16-day-old embryonic quail pectoralis muscles, 15-day-old postnatal quail pectoralis muscle, and 3- to 10-day-old embryonic quail cardiac and gut muscles. Grafts were implanted into 2-day-old chick embryos in place of the dorsal halves of somites from the prospective wing level. After implantation of dermomyotome fragments, we observed that quail cells participated in trunk and limb musculature. After implantation of 7- to 10-day-old embryonic muscle, quail cells were rarely found in the limb but systematically took part in the formation of trunk muscles. All these capacities were totally lost in 16-day-old embryonic and 15-day-old postnatal muscles. After implantation of nonsomitic derivatives such as embryonic cardiac and gut muscles, implanted cells never participated either in wing or trunk musculature. After dermomyotome, embryonic muscle, and gut implantation, quail cells were capable of invading the dermis and aggregating into feather germs. Our results extend those previously reported and indicate that somitic myogenic derivatives which do not migrate in the normal course of embryogenesis have migratory potentialities and are able to give rise to axial muscles. All these potentialities are lost as myogenesis proceeds in embryos.
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Abstract
The technique of backtransplantation was used to investigate the developmental potential of neural crest cells that have migrated to and colonized the bowel. Segments of chimaeric gut in which only the crest-derived cells were of quail origin, were grafted between somites and neural tube of younger chick host either at truncal (somites 18-24) or at rhombencephalic level. Quail neural crest-derived cells were identified in the spinal cord, spinal roots and ganglia, sympathetic ganglia and the adrenals, cranial sensory ganglia according to the level selected for the graft. These experiments demonstrate that crest-derived cells, having previously migrated to the gut, retained the ability to migrate to distant sites into a younger host. The chimaeric gut transplants induced a unilateral increase in the host's neural tube as it had been previously revealed after quail gut, skeletal, and cardiac muscle backtransplantation. Moreover, our experiments demonstrate that the number of the motor neuron progenitors is affected when spinal cord and gut experimentally developed in close contact. These observations support the hypothesis that gut smooth muscle as striated muscles releases a short range diffusible factor that induces proliferative effects on the neuroepithelial cells. The growth-promoting effect occurs during the time neurons are actively generated. It must still be determined whether such extrinsically derived factors participate in the regulation of cell proliferation in the central nervous system.
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24
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Abstract
Myoblasts from rudiments of slow and fast muscle, anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) and posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) respectively, of 9-day-old quail embryos were cultured in vitro for a period of up to 60 days in order to give rise to well-differentiated muscle fibres. These fibres were innervated by neurons from either quail or mouse embryo spinal cord and their innervation pattern was examined by the visualization of acetylcholine receptors (ACh-R) and of acetylcholinesterase (ACh-E) activity at the neuromuscular contacts. In the culture system used, quail neurons always innervated muscle fibres at several sites and only when a fast-type activity was imposed on these neurons did a reduction in the number of the previously established neuromuscular contacts take place. In contrast, in the muscle fibres innervated by mouse neurons, a spontaneous reduction in the number of the previously established neuromuscular contacts occurred but this spontaneous reduction depended upon the level of differentiation reached by the muscle fibres in vitro. In the cultures of muscle fibres previously innervated by mouse neurons, the addition of quail neurons did not provoke any modification in the initial innervation pattern, and no quail ACh-R cluster was observed. In contrast, in the muscle fibres previously innervated by quail neurons, the mouse neurons contacted these fibres, resulting in a decrease in the number of quail ACh-R clusters. These results emphasize the part played by neurons in the establishment of the innervation pattern when muscle fibres have reached a high level of differentiation. In vitro, the slow and fast characteristics of the muscle fibres do not influence this pattern.
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25
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In vivo and in vitro development of somatostatin-like-immunoreactivity in the peripheral nervous system of quail embryos. J Neurosci 1984; 4:1549-58. [PMID: 6374061 PMCID: PMC6564964] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/19/2023] Open
Abstract
The appearance and development of somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI) in the peripheral nervous system of quail embryos were studied using radioimmunoanalysis and immunocytochemistry. In vivo, no SLI is observed in neural crest cells before or during migration. SLI appears between days 3 and 4 of incubation in sympathetic ganglia, immediately following ganglion formation, and between days 4 and 5 of incubation in the adrenal gland, soon after the adrenal gland primordium first appears. The development of SLI in the adrenal gland differs from that in the sympathetic ganglia. While in the former the amount of SLI and the number of SLI-containing cells increase as the embryo ages, in the sympathetic ganglia the amount of SLI and the percentage of SLI-containing cells decrease. When migrating neural crest cells are obtained from the sclerotomal part of 3-day embryos and grown in culture, they first display SLI after 48 hr, and the amount of SLI increases thereafter. When the sympathoadrenal precursors are removed at 4 days of incubation and grown in vitro, SLI appears after 24 hr in culture and increases during the next few days. Our results demonstrate that SLI is present very early in the quail embryo and that its appearance parallels the differentiation of neural crest cells into autonomic sympathetic ganglionic cells. We also show that the differentiation of neural crest into SLI-containing cells can be reproduced in culture, thus permitting the study of peptide production and expression in vitro.
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26
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Abstract
The possibility that the somatostatin cells are derived from the neurectoderm has been questioned in avian embryos. Isotopic and isochronic transplantations of the neural primordium from quail into chick embryos were made at the vagal level (somites 1 to 7). Quail and chick cells can be distinguished by the structure of their nucleus. The somatostatin cells were characterized immunocytochemically. In no case did quail cells showing the immunological reaction originate from the neural crest.
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