Muscle repair after physiological damage relies on nuclear migration for cellular reconstruction

W Roman, H Pinheiro, MR Pimentel, J Segalés… - Science, 2021 - science.org
W Roman, H Pinheiro, MR Pimentel, J Segalés, LM Oliveira, E García-Domínguez
Science, 2021science.org
Regeneration of skeletal muscle is a highly synchronized process that requires muscle stem
cells (satellite cells). We found that localized injuries, as experienced through exercise,
activate a myofiber self-repair mechanism that is independent of satellite cells in mice and
humans. Mouse muscle injury triggers a signaling cascade involving calcium, Cdc42, and
phosphokinase C that attracts myonuclei to the damaged site via microtubules and dynein.
These nuclear movements accelerate sarcomere repair and locally deliver messenger RNA …
Regeneration of skeletal muscle is a highly synchronized process that requires muscle stem cells (satellite cells). We found that localized injuries, as experienced through exercise, activate a myofiber self-repair mechanism that is independent of satellite cells in mice and humans. Mouse muscle injury triggers a signaling cascade involving calcium, Cdc42, and phosphokinase C that attracts myonuclei to the damaged site via microtubules and dynein. These nuclear movements accelerate sarcomere repair and locally deliver messenger RNA (mRNA) for cellular reconstruction. Myofiber self-repair is a cell-autonomous protective mechanism and represents an alternative model for understanding the restoration of muscle architecture in health and disease.
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