Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2039719 Cell Reports 2016 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•β-catenin signaling in adult muscle progenitor cells (MPCs) controls muscle regeneration•The absence of β-catenin signaling perturbs MPC differentiation•Activation of β-catenin leads MPCs toward precocious differentiation•TGF-β injection restores MPC ability to differentiate in the absence of β-catenin

SummarySkeletal muscle regeneration relies on a pool of resident muscle stem cells called satellite cells (MuSCs). Following injury-induced destruction of the myofibers, quiescent MuSCs are activated and generate transient amplifying progenitors (myoblasts) that will fuse to form new myofibers. Here, we focus on the canonical Wnt signaling pathway and find that either conditional β-catenin disruption or activation in adult MuSCs results in perturbation of muscle regeneration. Using both in vivo and in vitro approaches, we observed that myoblasts lacking β-catenin show delayed differentiation, whereas myoblasts with constitutively active β-catenin undergo precocious growth arrest and differentiation. Transcriptome analysis further demonstrated that Wnt/β-catenin signaling interacts with multiple pathways and, more specifically, TGF-β signaling. Indeed, exogenous TGF-β2 stimulation restores the regenerative potential of muscles with targeted β-catenin disruption in MuSCs. We conclude that a precise level of β-catenin activity is essential for regulating the amplification and differentiation of MuSC descendants during adult myogenesis.

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