AI Article Synopsis

  • Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a serious motor neuron disease that leads to muscle wasting, paralysis, and death, and its causes involve complex mechanisms in various cell types, not just motor neurons.
  • Researchers studied myocytes from a specific ALS mouse model and found that these muscle cells had impaired myogenic (muscle-building) capabilities compared to normal control cells.
  • The study indicates that healthy myocytes can release factors that help restore the myogenic function in ALS-affected cells and identifies changes in secreted molecules like amino acids and lipids, highlighting the importance of skeletal muscle in ALS research.

Article Abstract

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a motor neuron (MN) disease associated with progressive muscle atrophy, paralysis, and eventually death. Growing evidence demonstrates that the pathological process leading to ALS is the result of multiple altered mechanisms occurring not only in MNs but also in other cell types inside and outside the central nervous system. In this context, the involvement of skeletal muscle has been the subject of a few studies on patients and ALS animal models. In this work, by using primary myocytes derived from the ALS transgenic hSOD1(G93A) mouse model, we observed that the myogenic capability of such cells was defective compared to cells derived from control mice expressing the nonpathogenic hSOD1(WT) isoform. The correct in vitro myogenesis of hSOD1(G93A) primary skeletal muscle cells was rescued by the addition of a conditioned medium from healthy hSOD1(WT) myocytes, suggesting the existence of an in trans activity of secreted factors. To define a dataset of molecules participating in such safeguard action, we conducted comparative metabolomic profiling of a culture medium collected from hSOD1(G93A) and hSOD1(WT) primary myocytes and report here an altered secretion of amino acids and lipid-based signaling molecules. These findings support the urgency of better understanding the role of the skeletal muscle secretome in the regulation of the myogenic program and mechanisms of ALS pathogenesis and progression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10706027PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12232751DOI Listing

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