AI Article Synopsis

  • - Acute skeletal muscle injuries lead to a sequence of necrosis and tissue repair, driven by muscle stem cells (MuSCs) and the critical involvement of immune cells that aid in muscle regeneration through phagocytosis and the release of factors influencing MuSC behavior.
  • - The interactions between MuSCs and immune cells dictate how effectively muscle tissue can regenerate, highlighting the significance of immune cell populations during this healing process.
  • - The research includes methods for isolating immune cells from skeletal muscle and studying injury response, with a focus on how aging impacts immune function and muscle repair, particularly using aged mouse models.

Article Abstract

Acute skeletal muscle injury initiates a process of necrosis, debris clearance, and ultimately tissue regeneration via myogenesis. While skeletal muscle stem cells (MuSCs) are responsible for populating the proliferative myogenic progenitor pool to fuel muscle repair, recruited and resident immune cells have a central role in the regulation of muscle regeneration via the execution of phagocytosis and release of soluble factors that act directly on MuSCs to regulate myogenic differentiation. Therefore, the timing of MuSC proliferation and differentiation is closely linked to the populations and behaviors of immune cells present within skeletal muscle. This has important implications for aging and muscle repair, as systemic changes in immune system function contribute to a decline in muscle regenerative capacity. Here, we present adapted protocols for the isolation of mononuclear cells from skeletal muscles for the quantification of immune cell populations using flow cytometry. We also describe a cardiotoxin skeletal muscle injury protocol and detail the expected outcomes including immune cell infiltration to the injured sites and formation of new myocytes. As immune cell function is substantially influenced by aging, we extend these approaches and outcomes to aged mice.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-4128-6_16DOI Listing

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