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result(s) for
"Park, Inkuk"
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Muscle-resident mesenchymal progenitors sense and repair peripheral nerve injury via the GDNF-BDNF axis
2024
Fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) are muscle-resident mesenchymal progenitors that can contribute to muscle tissue homeostasis and regeneration, as well as postnatal maturation and lifelong maintenance of the neuromuscular system. Recently, traumatic injury to the peripheral nerve was shown to activate FAPs, suggesting that FAPs can respond to nerve injury. However, questions of how FAPs can sense the anatomically distant peripheral nerve injury and whether FAPs can directly contribute to nerve regeneration remained unanswered. Here, utilizing single-cell transcriptomics and mouse models, we discovered that a subset of FAPs expressing GDNF receptors
Ret
and
Gfra1
can respond to peripheral nerve injury by sensing GDNF secreted by Schwann cells. Upon GDNF sensing, this subset becomes activated and expresses
Bdnf
. FAP-specific inactivation of
Bdnf
(
Prrx1
Cre
; Bdnf
fl/fl
) resulted in delayed nerve regeneration owing to defective remyelination, indicating that GDNF-sensing FAPs play an important role in the remyelination process during peripheral nerve regeneration. In aged mice, significantly reduced
Bdnf
expression in FAPs was observed upon nerve injury, suggesting the clinical relevance of FAP-derived BDNF in the age-related delays in nerve regeneration. Collectively, our study revealed the previously unidentified role of FAPs in peripheral nerve regeneration, and the molecular mechanism behind FAPs’ response to peripheral nerve injury.
Journal Article
Maintenance of type 2 glycolytic myofibers with age by Mib1-Actn3 axis
2021
Age-associated muscle atrophy is a debilitating condition associated with loss of muscle mass and function with age that contributes to limitation of mobility and locomotion. However, the underlying mechanisms of how intrinsic muscle changes with age are largely unknown. Here we report that, with age, Mind bomb-1 (Mib1) plays important role in skeletal muscle maintenance via proteasomal degradation-dependent regulation of α-actinin 3 (Actn3). The disruption of
Mib1
in myofibers (Mib1
ΔMF
) results in alteration of type 2 glycolytic myofibers, muscle atrophy, impaired muscle function, and Actn3 accumulation. After chronic exercise, Mib1
ΔMF
mice show muscle atrophy even at young age. However, when Actn3 level is downregulated, chronic exercise-induced muscle atrophy is ameliorated. Importantly, the Mib1 and Actn3 levels show clinical relevance in human skeletal muscles accompanied by decrease in skeletal muscle function with age. Together, these findings reveal the significance of the Mib1-Actn3 axis in skeletal muscle maintenance with age and suggest the therapeutic potential for the treatment or amelioration of age-related muscle atrophy.
Muscle atrophy is associated with ageing, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are not well understood. Here, they authors show that ablation of the E3 ubiquitin ligase Mib1 is important for myofibre maintenance via a mechanism that involves targeting and degradation of Actn3, and that Mib1 ablation in mice induces muscle atrophy which can be rescued by knockown of Actn3 expression.
Journal Article
Bap1/SMN axis in Dpp4+ skeletal muscle mesenchymal cells regulates the neuromuscular system
2022
The survival of motor neuron (SMN) protein is a major component of the pre-mRNA splicing machinery and is required for RNA metabolism. Although SMN has been considered a fundamental gene for the central nervous system, due to its relationship with neuromuscular diseases, such as spinal muscular atrophy, recent studies have also revealed the requirement of SMN in non-neuronal cells in the peripheral regions. Here, we report that the fibro-adipogenic progenitor subpopulation expressing Dpp4 (Dpp4+ FAPs) is required for the neuromuscular system. Furthermore, we also reveal that BRCA1-associated protein-1 (Bap1) is crucial for the stabilization of SMN in FAPs by preventing its ubiquitination-dependent degradation. Inactivation of Bap1 in FAPs decreased SMN levels and accompanied degeneration of the neuromuscular junction, leading to loss of motor neurons and muscle atrophy. Overexpression of the ubiquitination-resistant SMN variant, SMNK186R, in Bap1-null FAPs completely prevented neuromuscular degeneration. In addition, transplantation of Dpp4+ FAPs, but not Dpp4- FAPs, completely rescued neuromuscular defects. Our data reveal the crucial role of Bap1-mediated SMN stabilization in Dpp4+ FAPs for the neuromuscular system and provide the possibility of cell-based therapeutics to treat neuromuscular diseases.
Journal Article
The hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis controls muscle stem cell senescence through autophagosome clearance
2021
Background
With organismal aging, the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal (HPG) activity gradually decreases, resulting in the systemic functional declines of the target tissues including skeletal muscles. Although the HPG axis plays an important role in health span, how the HPG axis systemically prevents functional aging is largely unknown.
Methods
We generated muscle stem cell (MuSC)‐specific androgen receptor (Ar) and oestrogen receptor 2 (Esr2) double knockout (dKO) mice and pharmacologically inhibited (Antide) the HPG axis to mimic decreased serum levels of sex steroid hormones in aged mice. After short‐term and long‐term sex hormone signalling ablation, the MuSCs were functionally analysed, and their aging phenotypes were compared with those of geriatric mice (30‐month‐old). To investigate pathways associated with sex hormone signalling disruption, RNA sequencing and bioinformatic analyses were performed.
Results
Disrupting the HPG axis results in impaired muscle regeneration [wild‐type (WT) vs. dKO, P < 0.0001; Veh vs. Antide, P = 0.004]. The expression of DNA damage marker (in WT = 7.0 ± 1.6%, dKO = 32.5 ± 2.6%, P < 0.01; in Veh = 13.4 ± 4.5%, Antide = 29.7 ± 5.5%, P = 0.028) and senescence‐associated β‐galactosidase activity (in WT = 3.8 ± 1.2%, dKO = 10.3 ± 1.6%, P < 0.01; in Veh = 2.1 ± 0.4%, Antide = 9.6 ± 0.8%, P = 0.005), as well as the expression levels of senescence‐associated genes, p16Ink4a and p21Cip1, was significantly increased in the MuSCs, indicating that genetic and pharmacological inhibition of the HPG axis recapitulates the progressive aging process of MuSCs. Mechanistically, the ablation of sex hormone signalling reduced the expression of transcription factor EB (Tfeb) and Tfeb target gene in MuSCs, suggesting that sex hormones directly induce the expression of Tfeb, a master regulator of the autophagy–lysosome pathway, and consequently autophagosome clearance. Transduction of the Tfeb in naturally aged MuSCs increased muscle mass [control geriatric MuSC transplanted tibialis anterior (TA) muscle = 34.3 ± 2.9 mg, Tfeb‐transducing geriatric MuSC transplanted TA muscle = 44.7 ± 6.7 mg, P = 0.015] and regenerating myofibre size [eMyHC+tdTomato+ myofibre cross‐section area (CSA) in control vs. Tfeb, P = 0.002] after muscle injury.
Conclusions
Our data show that the HPG axis systemically controls autophagosome clearance in MuSCs through Tfeb and prevents MuSCs from senescence, suggesting that sustained HPG activity throughout life regulates autophagosome clearance to maintain the quiescence of MuSCs by preventing senescence until advanced age.
Journal Article
Sex hormones establish a reserve pool of adult muscle stem cells
2016
Quiescent satellite cells, known as adult muscle stem cells, possess a remarkable ability to regenerate skeletal muscle following injury throughout life. Although they mainly originate from multipotent stem/progenitor cells of the somite, the mechanism underlying the establishment of quiescent satellite cell populations is unknown. Here, we show that sex hormones induce Mind bomb 1 (Mib1) expression in myofibres at puberty, which activates Notch signalling in cycling juvenile satellite cells and causes them to be converted into adult quiescent satellite cells. Myofibres lacking Mib1 fail to send Notch signals to juvenile satellite cells, leading to impaired cell cycle exit and depletion. Our findings reveal that the hypothalamic–pituitary–gonadal axis drives Mib1 expression in the myofibre niche. Moreover, the same axis regulates the re-establishment of quiescent satellite cell populations following injury. Our data show that sex hormones establish adult quiescent satellite cell populations by regulating the myofibre niche at puberty and re-establish them during regeneration.
Kim
et al.
demonstrate that sex hormones induce Mib1 expression in myofibres during puberty, initiating the conversion of cycling juvenile satellite cells into adult quiescent satellite cells.
Journal Article
Muscle-resident mesenchymal progenitors sense and repair peripheral nerve injury via the GDNF-BDNF axis
2024
Fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) are muscle-resident mesenchymal progenitors that can contribute to muscle tissue homeostasis and regeneration, as well as postnatal maturation and lifelong maintenance of the neuromuscular system. Recently, traumatic injury to the peripheral nerve was shown to activate FAPs, suggesting that FAPs can respond to nerve injury. However, questions of how FAPs can sense the anatomically distant peripheral nerve injury and whether FAPs can directly contribute to nerve regeneration remained unanswered. Here, utilizing single-cell transcriptomics and mouse models, we discovered that a subset of FAPs expressing GDNF receptors
Ret
and
Gfra1
can respond to peripheral nerve injury by sensing GDNF secreted by Schwann cells. Upon GDNF sensing, this subset becomes activated and expresses
Bdnf
. FAP-specific inactivation of
Bdnf
(
Prrx1
Cre
; Bdnf
fl/fl
) resulted in delayed nerve regeneration owing to defective remyelination, indicating that GDNF-sensing FAPs play an important role in the remyelination process during peripheral nerve regeneration. In aged mice, significantly reduced
Bdnf
expression in FAPs was observed upon nerve injury, suggesting the clinical relevance of FAP-derived BDNF in the age-related delays in nerve regeneration. Collectively, our study revealed the previously unidentified role of FAPs in peripheral nerve regeneration, and the molecular mechanism behind FAPs’ response to peripheral nerve injury.
Journal Article
Baf155 regulates skeletal muscle metabolism via HIF-1a signaling
2023
During exercise, skeletal muscle is exposed to a low oxygen condition, hypoxia. Under hypoxia, the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) is stabilized and induces expressions of its target genes regulating glycolytic metabolism. Here, using a skeletal muscle-specific gene ablation mouse model, we show that Brg1/Brm-associated factor 155 (Baf155), a core subunit of the switch/sucrose non-fermentable (SWI/SNF) complex, is essential for HIF-1α signaling in skeletal muscle. Muscle-specific ablation of Baf155 increases oxidative metabolism by reducing HIF-1α function, which accompanies the decreased lactate production during exercise. Furthermore, the augmented oxidation leads to high intramuscular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) level and results in the enhancement of endurance exercise capacity. Mechanistically, our chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) analysis reveals that Baf155 modulates DNA-binding activity of HIF-1α to the promoters of its target genes. In addition, for this regulatory function, Baf155 requires a phospho-signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (pSTAT3), which forms a coactivator complex with HIF-1α, to activate HIF-1α signaling. Our findings reveal the crucial role of Baf155 in energy metabolism of skeletal muscle and the interaction between Baf155 and hypoxia signaling.
Journal Article
Erratum: Sex hormones establish a reserve pool of adult muscle stem cells
by
Jeong, Hyun-Woo
,
Yum, Min-Kyu
,
Hann, Sang-Hyeon
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Cancer Research
,
Cell Biology
2016
Nature Cell Biology 18, 930–940 (2016); published online 22 August 2016; corrected after print 8 September 2016 In the version of this Article originally published, in the key in Fig. 1b, the red and black data points were incorrectly labelled; the red data points should have been labelled 'DHT' andthe black data points as 'Veh'.
Journal Article
Muscle-resident mesenchymal progenitors sense and repair peripheral nerve injury via the GDNF-BDNF axis
2024
Fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) are muscle-resident mesenchymal progenitors that can contribute to muscle tissue homeostasis and regeneration, as well as postnatal maturation and lifelong maintenance of the neuromuscular system. Recently, traumatic injury to the peripheral nerve was shown to activate FAPs, suggesting that FAPs can respond to nerve injury. However, questions of how FAPs can sense the anatomically distant peripheral nerve injury and whether FAPs can directly contribute to nerve regeneration remained unanswered. Here, utilizing single-cell transcriptomics and mouse models, we discovered that a subset of FAPs expressing GDNF receptors Ret and Gfra1 can respond to peripheral nerve injury by sensing GDNF secreted by Schwann cells. Upon GDNF sensing, this subset becomes activated and expresses Bdnf. FAP-specific inactivation of Bdnf (Prrx1Cre; Bdnffl/fl) resulted in delayed nerve regeneration owing to defective remyelination, indicating that GDNF-sensing FAPs play an important role in the remyelination process during peripheral nerve regeneration. In aged mice, significantly reduced Bdnf expression in FAPs was observed upon nerve injury, suggesting the clinical relevance of FAP-derived BDNF in the age-related delays in nerve regeneration. Collectively, our study revealed the previously unidentified role of FAPs in peripheral nerve regeneration, and the molecular mechanism behind FAPs’ response to peripheral nerve injury.