Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1912001 | Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2006 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Mice lacking glutathione peroxidase-1 (Gpx1) have decreased resistance to systemically administered oxidants as well as infections, and sustain increased damage after ischemia-reperfusion injuries. However, stem or progenitor cell function in these animals has not been studied. We characterized patterns of proliferation, apoptosis, and differentiation of primary muscle progenitor cells (myoblasts) from Gpx1â/â mice. Myoblasts are the transit amplifying compartment of skeletal muscle. All aspects of myoblast biology are negatively affected by deletion of Gpx1. In particular, passaged, proliferating Gpx1â/â myoblasts, when induced to differentiate into fused multinucleated myotubes, show significant impairment, and form only a few immature myotubes. This defect occurs despite increased expression of the core regulators of muscle differentiation, the myogenic basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factors, in the Gpx1â/â myoblasts. Furthermore, Gpx1â/â myoblasts exhibited decreased proliferation and increased apoptosis compared to wild-type cells. In vivo, muscle fiber areas are decreased in Gpx1â/â vs wild-type mice. These data suggest that Gpx1 is important for adult muscle progenitor cell function at many levels, is necessary for integrity of muscle differentiation, and that quiescent resident stem cell populations may be particularly vulnerable to peroxide-mediated damage.
Keywords
DAPIphenyl-N-tert-butylnitroneMyotubePBNCM-H2DCFDAGPx1bHLHMnSODECLPFACuZnSODFGFNACGSHPBSCPTDMEMGFP4′-6-diamidino-2-phenylindoleDulbecco's modified Eagle MediumN-acetylcysteineROSCPRbasic helix-loop-helixBrdUbromodeoxyuridineTUNELMyosin heavy chainmanganese superoxide dismutasecopper zinc superoxide dismutaseSkeletal musclefibroblast growth factorMHCPhosphate-buffered salineMyoblastpolymerase chain reactionPCRparaformaldehydeDifferentiation potentialPeroxidegreen fluorescent proteinGlutathioneglutathione peroxidase-1Reactive oxygen species
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Authors
Sukkyoo Lee, H. Stella Shin, Paula K. Shireman, Aphrodite Vasilaki, Holly Van Remmen, Marie E. Csete,