Muscles are composed of multinucleated muscle fibers with different contractile and physiological properties, which result from specific slow or fast gene expression programs in the differentiated muscle cells. In the zebra fish embryo, the slow program is under the control of Hedgehog signaling from the notochord and floor plate. This pathway activates the expression of the conserved transcriptional repressor, Prdm1 (Blimp1), which in turn represses the fast program and promotes the slow program in adaxial cells of the somite and their descendants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn vertebrates, skeletal muscle is derived from mesodermal structures called somites. Myogenic progenitor cells that form skeletal muscles of the trunk and limbs are derived from the dermomyotome, the dorsal region of the somite. These cells enter the myogenic program by activating a set of four myogenic regulatory factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe role of hepatocyte apoptosis in the physiopathology of obstructive cholestasis is still controversial. Although some data have strongly suggested that hepatocellular cholestatic injury is due to Fas-mediated hepatocyte apoptosis, some others concluded that necrosis, rather than apoptosis, represents the main type of hepatocyte death in chronic cholestasis. Moreover, it has also been suggested that the reduced liver injury observed in the absence of Fas receptor after bile duct ligation was not due to lower hepatocyte apoptosis but to the indirect role of this receptor in non-hepatocytic cells such as cholangiocytes and inflammatory cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccumulating evidence indicates that oxidative stress is involved in the physiopathology of liver fibrogenesis. However, amid the global context of hepatic oxidative stress, the specific role of hepatocyte mitochondrial dysfunction in the fibrogenic process is still unknown. The aim of this study was to determine whether a targeted protection of hepatocytes against mitochondrial dysfunction could modulate fibrosis progression.
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