Muscle stem cells (MuSCs) play a crucial role in skeletal muscle regeneration, residing in a niche that undergoes dimensional and mechanical changes throughout the regeneration process. This study investigates how 3D confinement and stiffness encountered by MuSCs during the later stages of regeneration regulate their function, including stemness, activation, proliferation, and differentiation. An asymmetric 3D hydrogel bilayer platform is engineered with tunable physical constraints to mimic the regenerating MuSC niche. These results demonstrate that increased 3D confinement maintains Pax7 expression, reduces MuSC activation and proliferation, inhibits differentiation, and is associated with smaller nuclear size and decreased H4K16ac levels, suggesting that mechanical confinement modulates both nuclear architecture and epigenetic regulation. MuSCs in unconfined 2D environments exhibit larger nuclei and higher H4K16ac expression compared to those in more confined 3D conditions, leading to progressive activation, expansion, and myogenic commitment. This study highlights the importance of 3D mechanical cues in MuSC fate regulation, with 3D confinement acting as a mechanical brake on myogenic commitment, offering novel insights into the mechano-epigenetic mechanisms that govern MuSC behavior during muscle regeneration.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adbi.202400717DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mechanical confinement
8
muscle stem
8
muscle regeneration
8
activation proliferation
8
myogenic commitment
8
mechanical
5
confinement directs
4
muscle
4
directs muscle
4
stem cell
4

Similar Publications

This paper investigates the effect of fiber-reinforced composites (FRPs) on the mechanical properties of concrete under ambient conditions. It begins with an examination of the various types of FRP and their advantages, followed by a review of isostructural models for passively restrained concrete under ambient conditions. These models are categorized into two main groups: those assuming constant confining stresses and those that incorporate stress constraints related to the loading history.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Under undrained monotonic static loading, saturated loose granular materials may undergo static liquefaction. Tailings, a kind of granular material, pose particularly serious hazards after static liquefaction. To understand the effects of the initial state and fines content on the static liquefaction of tailings, consolidated undrained triaxial compression tests and one-dimensional compression tests were carried out on tailings with different initial states and fines content.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Glass-confined carbon dots: transparent afterglow materials with switchable TADF and RTP.

Nanoscale

March 2025

Key Laboratory of Materials for High Power Laser, Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 201800, China.

The confined synthesis of carbon dots (CDs) in solid matrixes is a promising avenue for developing new afterglow materials. Benefiting from the advantages of the sol-gel preparation of nanoporous glass, we report transparent glass-confined CDs with tunable afterglow luminescence. Switchable thermally-activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) and room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) of CDs were achieved by adjusting the sintering temperature and ion doping.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Compression strongly degrades the electrical conductivity of the liquid-metal-based circuits because the liquid state is prone to be squashed. Here, a new compressible and stretchable biphasic liquid-solid self-healing circuit is proposed by filling GalnSn-BilnSn biphasic metal into micropillar-embedded channels. The underlying BilnSn solid alloy layer serves as a compression resistance layer, while the upper GalnSn liquid metal layer enables the real-time filling of the cracks in the solid layer under large deformations, resulting in autonomous self-healing and maintenance of conductivity under both stretching and compression.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fluid Control of Dip Coating for Efficient Large-Area Organic Solar Cells.

Adv Mater

March 2025

State Key Laboratory of Polymer Physics and Chemistry, Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Science, Institute of Chemistry Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100190, China.

As a classical low-cost technique, dip coating has not been used for printable electronics. Here, the study demonstrates large-area organic solar cells can be made by dip coating. The correlation is revealed among Van der Waals forces in precursor film, aggregation state of polymer, and fibrous orientation in active layer; the relationship is also expounded between fluid mechanics of the confined liquid in polymer scaffold and the continuity of the acceptor phase.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!