AI Article Synopsis

  • Skeletal muscles can adapt and regenerate in response to injury or mechanical stress, but the specific cellular mechanisms behind this adaptation are not well understood.
  • Researchers used single-cell RNA sequencing to analyze gene expression in overloaded muscles and found that the cellular makeup of overloaded muscles closely resembled that of regenerating muscles, especially during macrophage activity.
  • They discovered that granulin, a factor produced by macrophages, plays a significant role in inhibiting muscle satellite cell differentiation, and granulin-knockout mice had reduced muscle growth due to premature differentiation of those cells.

Article Abstract

Skeletal muscles exert remarkable regenerative or adaptive capacities in response to injuries or mechanical loads. However, the cellular networks underlying muscle adaptation are poorly understood compared to those underlying muscle regeneration. We employed single-cell RNA sequencing to investigate the gene expression patterns and cellular networks activated in overloaded muscles and compared these results with those observed in regenerating muscles. The cellular composition of the 4-day overloaded muscle, when macrophage infiltration peaked, closely resembled that of the 10-day regenerating muscle. In addition to the mesenchymal progenitor-muscle satellite cell (MuSC) axis, interactome analyses or targeted depletion experiments revealed communications between mesenchymal progenitors-macrophages and macrophages-MuSCs. Furthermore, granulin, a macrophage-derived factor, inhibited MuSC differentiation, and Granulin-knockout mice exhibited blunted muscle hypertrophy due to the premature differentiation of overloaded MuSCs. These findings reveal the critical role of granulin through the relayed communications of mesenchymal progenitors, macrophages, and MuSCs in facilitating efficient muscle hypertrophy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2024.114052DOI Listing

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