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1.
We have studied the appearance, distribution and regulation of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) in a mouse skeletal muscle cell line (C2), that was originally isolated and described by Yaffe & Saxel [54]. In culture, cells from this line form spontaneously contracting myotubes, with overshooting action potentials that are TTX-sensitive. After fusion of myoblasts into myotubes, there was a dramatic increase in the amount of both AChE and AChR. Three forms of AChE, distinguished by their sedimentation on sucrose gradients, were synthesized: 4-6S, 10S, and 16S. The 4-6S and 10S forms appeared 1 day after the cells began to fuse, whereas the 16S form appeared only 2 days after fusion began. Maximal levels of the 16S AChE form (25-30% of the total) were obtained by reducing the concentration of horse serum in the fusion medium. Prevention of myoblast fusion by reducing the calcium levels in the medium decreased the total AChE by 70%, and only the 4-6S form was synthesized. Blocking spontaneous contractile activity of the myotubes by tetrodotoxin (TTX) led to a 50% reduction in all three esterase forms. Thus, the 16S, or endplate form of AChE is not specifically regulated by electrical or contractile activity in the C2 cell line. After fusion the number of AChRs increased rapidly for 3-4 days and then stabilized. Receptor clusters, ranging from 10-30 micron in length, appeared 1 day after myoblast fusion began. When cells were grown in medium containing reduced Ca2+, the total number of AChRs was decreased by 20-50%. Reduction of Ca2+ after myotubes and AChR clusters had formed resulted in dispersal of AChR clusters. Inhibition of muscle contractions with TTX did not affect the number of AChRs or their distribution.  相似文献   

2.
We have investigated the sequential changes of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) distribution on identified Xenopus laevis muscle cells in culture before and after innervation. AChRs on muscle cells were stained with tetramethylrhodamine-conjugated alpha-bungarotoxin and the distribution of AChR clusters was examined on a fluorescence microscope using an image intensifier. Large receptor clusters were identified on muscle cells and their fate was followed afterward. In muscle cells cultured without neural tube cells, about one-half of the identified AChR clusters survived for 2 days. In nerve-muscle cocultures, preexisting AChR clusters survived longer on non-nerve-contacted muscle cells than on muscle cells cultured without nerve. However, in nerve-contacted muscle cells the great majority of preexisting AChR clusters dispersed within 2 days. The dispersal of preexisting AChR clusters preceded receptor accumulation along the path of nerve contact by about 12-16 hr. Therefore, an accelerated dispersal of receptor clusters in innervated muscle cells is not a consequence of receptor accumulation along the nerve. The preexisting AChR clusters located near and far from the nerve contact sites dispersed along a similar time course. Protease inhibitors, trasylol and leupeptin, reduced the nerve-induced dispersal of the preexisting AChR clusters in the period before AChR accumulation at the nerve contact sites but did not do so during the period when AChRs began to accumulate at nerve-muscle contact. The significance of the dispersal of preexisting receptor clusters is discussed with regard to neuromuscular junction formation.  相似文献   

3.
Numerous studies have shown that the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) is inserted in the plasma membrane of the muscle fiber, and that it is focalized at the site of neuromuscular junctions, as an effect of neural influence. In contrast, acetylcholinesterase (AChE) may be presynaptic or anchored in the basal lamina, as well as postsynaptic at neuromuscular junctions. We investigated the origin of the junctional enzyme, particularly the collagen-tailed asymmetric A12 forms, by studying the AChE contents of heterologous rat and chicken neuromuscular cocultures by immunohistochemical and biochemical methods. We found that the overall content of AChE, in the neuromuscular cocultures, including the A12 form, was essentially identical to the sum of the contents of separate myotube and motoneuron cultures. The sedimentation coefficients of the rat and chicken asymmetric forms are sufficiently different to clearly differentiate these enzymes in sucrose gradients: 16 S for rat, 20 S for chicken A12 AChE. Sedimentation analyses of AChE in cocultures thus showed that the A12 form was of muscular origin. In the case of aneural cultures of myotubes, histochemical staining of AChE activity or immunohistochemical staining with specific antibodies showed only very scarce, faint concentrations of enzyme. Some patches of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) were, however, visible in these cultures. Neuromuscular contacts are readily established in cocultures of myotubes with embryonic motoneurons from spinal cords. In the presence of motoneurons, the myotubes presented a larger number of AChR patches. The most remarkable feature of neuromuscular cocultures was the presence of numerous intense AChE patches which always coincided with AChR clusters. By specifically staining nerve terminals with tetanus toxin, we could show an excellent correlation between neuromuscular contacts and the presence of AChE-AChR patches. We found that the AChE patches in heterologous cocultures could be stained exclusively by the anti-myotube AChE antiserum. The focalized enzyme is therefore exclusively, or very predominantly, provided by the myotube.  相似文献   

4.
The aggregation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) is an early hallmark of the formation of neuromuscular junction (NMJ), and nitric oxide is recently known to play an important role. In many NMJ studies, nerve-muscle coculture model was used, and NG108-15 cells, a neuroblastoma x glioma hybrid cell line, were the most frequently used nerve cells. However, possible contributions from glial cells could not be excluded. In this study, Neuro-2a neuroblastoma cells were used instead of [corrected] coculture with myotubes, and the relationship between AChR aggregation and spatiotemporal expression and activation of nNOS (neuronal nitric oxide synthase) was examined. Upon coculture, AChR aggregates were observed by FITC-conjugated alpha-bungarotoxin, and double labeling of AChRs and neurofilament showed that the neurites of a Neuro-2a cell innervated several myotubes. After treating the cocultures with single dose of L-NAME at the end of 1-day [corrected] coculturing, only slight effect on AChR aggregation could be found indicating that nNOS is not related to the initial formation of AChR aggregates. In contrast, when L-NAME treatment was given at the end of a 3-day coculturing, the day just before reaching the maximum extent of AChR aggregation, new AChR aggregates were hardly formed and the preformed AChR aggregates were even dispersed indicating that the enlargement of AChR aggregates is highly dependent on the nNOS activity. Double-labeling study of nNOS and AChR further showed that the coupling of membranous nNOS to regions nearby the AChR aggregates was essential for the enlargement of AChR aggregates. These results not only revealed the spatiotemporal relationship between AChR aggregation and nNOS activity but also verified the feasibility and usefulness of using Neuro-2a cells in a coculture model.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract: Agrin is a synapse-organizing molecule that mediates the nerve-induced aggregation of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) and other postsynaptic components at the developing and regenerating vertebrate neuromuscular junctions. At the neuromuscular junction, three different cell types can express agrin, i.e., neuron, muscle, and Schwann cell. Several lines of evidence suggested that neuron-derived agrin is the AChR-aggregating factor, but the possible roles of muscle-derived agrin in the formation of AChR aggregate are not known. By using the recombinant DNA method, a clonal stable C2C12 cell line transfected with antisense agrin cDNA was created. RNA dot blot and western blot analysis indicated that the expression of agrin in the transfected cell was abolished by DNA transfection. When the agrin-deficient C2C12 cells were induced to form myotubes and subsequently cocultured with agrin cDNA transfected fibroblasts, AChR aggregates were formed in the cocultures. In addition, acetylcholinesterase (AChE) aggregates in agrin-deficient myotubes were also induced by exogenous agrin and the AChE aggregates were colocalized with the AChR aggregates. The agrin-deficient myotubes could also respond to neuron-induced AChR aggregation after coculturing with neuroblastoma cells. Thus, the agrin-deficient myotubes retain their ability to exhibit the agrin- or neuron-induced AChR aggregation. This result suggests that the formation of postsynaptic specializations during development and regeneration is mediated by neuron-derived agrin but not the agrin from muscle.  相似文献   

6.
Myogenic clones grown in vitro from cells of 4-, 6-, and 12-day chick embryo leg buds demonstrate reproducible stage-specific characteristics of morphology, extent of myotube formation, and culture medium requirements for differentiation, suggesting heterogeneity in the myogenic cell populations of the developing limb. To determine whether there is heterogeneity in the cytodifferentiation of different muscle colony types, clones have been examined for the appearance of two muscle-specific gene products—acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and acetylcholine receptor (AChR). AChE (detected by cytochemical reaction) and AChR (detected by autoradiography of [125I]α-bungarotoxin binding) appeared in myotubes of all muscle colony types, and also appeared in about 5% of the mononucleated cells of all muscle colonies; but neither were detectable in cells of nonfused clones (colonies containing no myotubes). The results suggest that all muscle colony-forming cell types have equivalent capacities to elaborate muscle-specific gene products once the process of differentiation is initiated. However, when putative muscle colony-forming cells are grown under certain conditions that do not permit cell fusion (e.g., conditioned medium-requiring clones grown in fresh medium), mononucleated cells do not accumulate AChE or AChR. Conditioned medium-dependent differentiation thus differs from the fusion-specific processes affected by Ca2+ deprivation and phospholipase C treatment, since in these cases mononucleated cells exhibit differentiated functions. The apparent cytodifferentiation (without fusion) of some mononucleated cells within muscle colonies in which most mononucleated cells continue to proliferate raises questions concerning the control of myoblast differentiation and its relationship to the cell cycle and to fusion.  相似文献   

7.
During ex vivo myoblast differentiation, a pool of quiescent mononucleated myoblasts, reserve cells, arise alongside myotubes. Insulin/insulin-like growth factor (IGF) and PKB/Akt-dependent phosphorylation activates skeletal muscle differentiation and hypertrophy. We have investigated the role of glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3) inhibition by protein kinase B (PKB)/Akt and Wnt/beta-catenin pathways in reserve cell activation during myoblast differentiation and myotube hypertrophy. Inhibition of GSK-3 by LiCl or SB216763, restored insulin-dependent differentiation of C2ind myoblasts in low serum, and cooperated with insulin in serum-free medium to induce MyoD and myogenin expression in C2ind myoblasts, quiescent C2 or primary human reserve cells. We show that LiCl treatment induced nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin in C2 myoblasts, thus mimicking activation of canonical Wnt signaling. Similarly to the effect of GSK-3 inhibitors with insulin, coculturing C2 reserve cells with Wnt1-expressing fibroblasts enhanced insulin-stimulated induction of MyoD and myogenin in reserve cells. A similar cooperative effect of LiCl or Wnt1 with insulin was observed during late ex vivo differentiation and promoted increased size and fusion of myotubes. We show that this synergistic effect on myotube hypertrophy involved an increased fusion of reserve cells into preexisting myotubes. These data reveal insulin and Wnt/beta-catenin pathways cooperate in muscle cell differentiation through activation and recruitment of satellite cell-like reserve myoblasts.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of denervation on acetylcholine receptor (AChR) cluster distribution on cultured Xenopus muscle cells has been examined in order to study the role of intact nerve in the maintenance of clusters at the nerve-muscle junction during development. AChRs on the muscle cell were labeled with tetramethyl rhodamine-conjugated alpha-bungarotoxin and sequential changes in AChR cluster distribution were examined with a fluorescence microscope using an image intensifier. Denervation was carried out by exposing the nerve cell body to a focused laser light of a high intensity. After this procedure the neurites originating from the cell quickly disintegrated and large AChR clusters associated with nerve divided into smaller clusters. Individual clusters subsequently decreased in size and finally disappeared. In about 30% of the cases new AChR clusters appeared at the extrajunctional region after denervation. These observations indicate that intact nerves are necessary for the maintenance of receptor localization at the nerve-muscle junction and that nerve-induced accumulation is seemingly reversible during the early period of synapse formation. We tested the idea that receptor clusters were lost due to diffusion of receptors in the muscle membrane after denervation. However, the rate of receptor cluster dispersal after denervation was much slower than that predicted by the diffusion model, suggesting that diffusion of receptors is not a rate-limiting step. Furthermore, we found that receptor clusters at the junction stabilize during days in culture. Thus, 80-90% of receptor clusters at the nerve-muscle junction disappeared at 7 hr after denervation in 1-day cocultures, while about 50% of receptor clusters remained after denervation in 3-day cocultures.  相似文献   

9.
The dystrophin-associated protein (DAP) complex spans the sarcolemmal membrane linking the cytoskeleton to the basement membrane surrounding each myofiber. Defects in the DAP complex have been linked previously to a variety of muscular dystrophies. Other evidence points to a role for the DAP complex in formation of nerve-muscle synapses. We show that myotubes differentiated from dystroglycan-/- embryonic stem cells are responsive to agrin, but produce acetylcholine receptor (AChR) clusters which are two to three times larger in area, about half as dense, and significantly less stable than those on dystroglycan+/+ myotubes. AChRs at neuromuscular junctions are similarly affected in dystroglycan-deficient chimeric mice and there is a coordinate increase in nerve terminal size at these junctions. In culture and in vivo the absence of dystroglycan disrupts the localization to AChR clusters of laminin, perlecan, and acetylcholinesterase (AChE), but not rapsyn or agrin. Treatment of myotubes in culture with laminin induces AChR clusters on dystroglycan+/+, but not -/- myotubes. These results suggest that dystroglycan is essential for the assembly of a synaptic basement membrane, most notably by localizing AChE through its binding to perlecan. In addition, they suggest that dystroglycan functions in the organization and stabilization of AChR clusters, which appear to be mediated through its binding of laminin.  相似文献   

10.
Previous studies carried out in our laboratory have shown that myofibers formed by fusion of muscle satellite cells from donors with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) type I or II undergo a characteristic degeneration 1.5-3 weeks after innervation with rat embryonic spinal cord explants. The only cells responsible for degeneration of innervated cocultures are SMA muscle satellite cells. In order to study the kinetics of nerve and muscle cell degeneration in nerve-muscle cocultures implicating SMA muscle cells, we attempted to simplify the nervous component of the coculture and identify the nerve cell types necessary for a successful innervation. We demonstrate here that motoneurons alone were unable to innervate myotubes. However, when three cell types (motoneurons, sensory neurons, and Schwann cells) were added onto a reconstituted muscular component consisting of cloned muscle satellite cells and cloned muscular fibroblasts, myotubes contracted, indicating that functional neuromuscular junctions were formed. We concluded that the three cell types were required for a successful innervation. Moreover, we studied the effects of culture medium conditioned by different combinations of nerve cells on innervation; we observed that physical contacts among sensory neurons, motoneurons, and myotubes are required for a successful innervation; in contrast Schwann cells can be replaced by a Schwann-cell-conditioned medium, indicating that these cells produce a putative soluble "innervation-promoting factor." Obviously such a reconstituted system does not reflect the in vivo situation but it allows the formation of functional motor synapses and could therefore allow us to elucidate neuromuscular disease pathogenesis, especially that of spinal muscular atrophy.  相似文献   

11.
Skeletal muscle cells are a useful model for studying cell differentiation. Muscle cell differentiation is marked by myoblast proliferation followed by progressive fusion to form large multinucleated myotubes that synthesize muscle-specific proteins and contract spontaneously. The molecular analysis of myogenesis has advanced with the identification of several myogenic regulatory factors, including myod1, myd, and myogenin. These factors regulate each other's expression and that of muscle-specific proteins such as the acetylcholine receptor and acetylcholinesterase (AChE). In order to investigate the role of extracellular matrix (ECM) in myogenesis we have cultured myoblasts (C2C12) in the presence or absence of an exogenous ECM (Matrigel). In addition, we have induced differentiation of myoblasts in the presence or absence of Matrigel and/or chlorate, a specific inhibitor of proteoglycan sulfation. Our results indicated that the formation of fused myotubes and expression of AChE was stimulated by Matrigel. Treatment of myoblasts induced to differentiate with chlorate resulted in an inhibition of cell fusion and AChE activity. Chlorate treatment was also found to inhibit the deposition and assembly of ECM components such fibronectin and laminin. The expression of myogenin mRNA was observed when myoblasts were induced to differentiate, but was unaffected by the presence of Matrigel or by culture of the cells in the presence of chlorate. These results suggest that the expression of myogenin is independent of the presence of ECM, but that the presence of ECM is essential for the formation of myotubes and the expression of later muscle-specific gene products. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Previous experiments have suggested that the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) may have a role in initial nerve-muscle adhesion. To determine whether N-CAM might be involved in synaptic differentiation, we grew ciliary ganglion neurons and embryonic myotubes together in the presence and absence of monovalent antibodies to N-CAM. In normal cultures, undifferentiated neurites contact myotubes, and the nerve at some of these neurite-myotube contacts acquires concentrations of synaptic vesicle antigens. Most of these vesicle antigen-positive contacts become associated with patches of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) on the surface of the underlying myotube. Contacts without concentrations of vesicle antigens do not become associated with AChR patches. In the presence of antibodies to N-CAM, adhesion between neuronal somata and myotubes was reduced, but neurites contacted myotubes with near-normal frequency. The subsequent differentiation of nerve and muscle at these contacts, as assayed by the localization of vesicle antigens and AChR, proceeded normally in the presence of anti-N-CAM antibodies. The results suggest that N-CAM-mediated adhesion between neurite and myotube is not required for synaptic differentiation.  相似文献   

13.
The A12 (asymmetric) form of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) is generally considered to be synthesized in leg muscle tissues by myotubes under neural influence, but not by myoblasts. We have examined the expression of the different molecular forms of AChE in explants of developing limb buds and dermomyotomes (the myogenic part of the somites) obtained from 3-day-old chick and quail embryos, either directly after removal or during in vitro culture. We describe a muscular differentiation of both territories in vitro, leading to the formation of myotubes which are morphologically similar to the class of early muscle cells described by Bonner and Hauschka (1974). In vivo the A12 form is present in quail dermomyotomes which are almost entirely composed of mononucleated poorly differentiated cells; in contrast, it is absent from similar cells in chick dermomyotomes and from limb buds in both species. This shows that in the case of quail embryos the appearance of the A12 form precedes the fusion of myoblasts into myotubes. In both species, dermomyotome explants express asymmetric and globular forms of the enzyme during muscular differentiation in vitro, whereas limb buds synthesize only globular forms. After surgical removal of neural tube and/or neural crest at 2 days in ovo, the biosynthesis of the A forms in quail dermomyotomes is not suppressed and is consequently not dependent upon prior connection of the dermomyotomes to central neurons or upon the presence of autonomic precursors. Since limb bud muscle cells derive from somites our results raise questions concerning the differentiation of migrating somitic cells in this territory where a neural influence appears necessary to induce the biosynthesis of asymmetric AChE forms.  相似文献   

14.
The functionally undefined Stac3 gene, predicted to encode a SH3 domain- and C1 domain-containing protein, was recently found to be specifically expressed in skeletal muscle and essential to normal skeletal muscle development and contraction. In this study we determined the potential role of Stac3 in myoblast proliferation and differentiation, two important steps of muscle development. Neither siRNA-mediated Stac3 knockdown nor plasmid-mediated Stac3 overexpression affected the proliferation of C2C12 myoblasts. Stac3 knockdown promoted the differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes as evidenced by increased fusion index, increased number of nuclei per myotube, and increased mRNA and protein expression of myogenic markers including myogenin and myosin heavy chain. In contrast, Stac3 overexpression inhibited the differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes as evidenced by decreased fusion index, decreased number of nuclei per myotube, and decreased mRNA and protein expression of myogenic markers. Compared to wild-type myoblasts, myoblasts from Stac3 knockout mouse embryos showed accelerated differentiation into myotubes in culture as evidenced by increased fusion index, increased number of nuclei per myotube, and increased mRNA expression of myogenic markers. Collectively, these data suggest an inhibitory role of endogenous Stac3 in myoblast differentiation. Myogenesis is a tightly controlled program; myofibers formed from prematurely differentiated myoblasts are dysfunctional. Thus, Stac3 may play a role in preventing precocious myoblast differentiation during skeletal muscle development.  相似文献   

15.
During differentiation of embryonic chick skeletal muscle in culture, elaboration of acetylcholine receptor (AChR) and acetylcholinesterase occurs shortly after myoblast fusion. During further development, AChR was found to decrease markedly on the myotube surface, while acetylcholinesterase continued to increase. Surface distribution of AChR, as followed by autoradiography using 125I-α-bungarotoxin, was homogeneous in newly fused myotubes. With further differentiation, clusters of AChR appeared on the surface of the myotubes, and their subsequent disappearance paralleled a decrease in overall AChR levels. Quantitative autoradiography showed a reduction of over 75% in the density of AChR on the surface of well differentiated, cross-striated myotubes. Thus the appearance of AChR on the cell surface, its condensation into clusters, and finally its depletion seem to be sequential events in the differentiation of skeletal muscle in culture in the absence of direct neuronal influence.  相似文献   

16.
alpha-smooth muscle actin (SMA) is typically not present in post-embryonic skeletal muscle myoblasts or skeletal muscle fibers. However, both primary myoblasts isolated from neonatal mouse muscle tissue, and C2C12, an established myoblast cell line, produced SMA in culture within hours of exposure to differentiation medium. The SMA appeared during the cells' initial elongation, persisted through differentiation and fusion into myotubes, remained abundant in early myotubes, and was occasionally observed in a striated pattern. SMA continued to be present during the initial appearance of sarcomeric actin, but disappeared shortly thereafter leaving only sarcomeric actin in contractile myotubes derived from primary myoblasts. Within one day after implantation of primary myoblasts into mouse skeletal muscle, SMA was observed in the myoblasts; but by 9 days post-implantation, no SMA was detectable in myoblasts or muscle fibers. Thus, both neonatal primary myoblasts and an established myoblast cell line appear to similarly reprise an embryonic developmental program during differentiation in culture as well as differentiation within adult mouse muscles.  相似文献   

17.
Muscular dysgenesis (mdg) in the mouse is an autosomal recessive mutation expressed in the homozygous mutant as lack of skeletal muscle contraction. To test the ability of normal neurons to form neuromuscular contacts with, and/or possibly induce contractions in mdgmdg muscle, dispersed cell cultures of normal and dysgenic muscle from newborn mice were cocultured with normal embryonic rat, mouse, and chick dissociated spinal cord cells. Contraction was induced in mdgmdg muscle 1 to 10 days (depending upon the species of the neuronal source) following establishment of the cocultures. Control experiments indicated that the dispersed spinal cord preparations were free of myoblasts capable of fusing with mdgmdg muscle. The establishment of neuromuscular contacts in the rat neuron cocultures was monitored by cytochemical staining of acetylcholinesterase (AChE), autoradiography of 125I-α-bungarotoxin-bound acetylcholine receptors (AChR), and electrophysiological study of muscle membrane activity. Patches of high AChE activity were similar in size and distribution to high-density clusters of AChR on both control and mdgmdg myotubes cocultured with rat neurons. The resting membrane potentials of normal myotubes and those of mdgmdg myotubes in the presence of neurons were similar (? ?52 mV). The mepp frequency and the mepp amplitude distribution were the same for both control and mutant cocultured muscle. Thus, normal rat spinal cord neurons were capable of forming normal, functional neuromuscular junctions with mdgmdg myotubes, and contractions were induced under coculture conditions, in otherwise noncontracting mutant muscle.  相似文献   

18.
When trifluoperazine (TFP), a calmodulin antagonist, was given to chick or rat myoblasts in cultures, formation of multinucleated myotubes was inhibited. The inhibition of cell fusion by TFP in rat cultures prevents the normal increase in the amount of acetylcholine receptors (AChR) and creatine kinase (CK), while the levels of these proteins in chick muscle cultures are hardly affected. Another calmodulin antagonist, compound 48/80, inhibits fusion at doses that correspond closely to its antagonistic effects on calmodulin. Thus, our results suggest a possible role for calmodulin in the regulation of myoblast fusion, but not on the appearance of muscle proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Proliferation and fusion of myoblasts are needed for the generation and repair of multinucleated skeletal muscle fibers in vivo. Studies of myocyte differentiation, cell fusion, and muscle repair are limited by an appropriate in vitro muscle cell culture system. We developed a novel cell culture technique [two-dimensional muscle syncytia (2DMS) technique] that results in formation of myotubes, organized in parallel much like the arrangement in muscle tissue. This technique is based on UV lithography–produced micro-patterned glass on which conventionally cultured C2C12 myoblasts proliferate, align, and fuse to neatly arranged contractile myotubes in parallel arrays. Combining this technique with fluorescent microscopy, we observed alignment of actin filament bundles and a perinuclear distribution of glucose transporter 4 after myotube formation. Newly formed myotubes contained adjacently located MyoD-positive and MyoD-negative nuclei, suggesting fusion of MyoD-positive and MyoD-negative cells. In comparison, the closely related myogenic factor Myf5 did not exhibit this pattern of distribution. Furthermore, cytoplasmic patches of MyoD colocalized with bundles of filamentous actin near myotube nuclei. At later stages of differentiation, all nuclei in the myotubes were MyoD negative. The 2DMS system is thus a useful tool for studies on muscle alignment, differentiation, fusion, and subcellular protein localization. (J Histochem Cytochem 56:881–892, 2008)  相似文献   

20.
Human satellite cells, obtained by surgical biopsies of traumatized legs of healthy individuals, were grown in culture in the presence of different concentrations of the phorbol ester tetradecanoyl-phorbol 12 acetate (TPA). Satellite cells, after an initial duplicative period, fused into large multinucleated myotubes which readily synthesized myosin and acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The presence of TPA at concentrations up to 10(-7) M did not affect the differentiation pattern, while higher concentrations were toxic. Thus human satellite cells are capable of differentiating in the presence of phorbol esters which block differentiation of embryonic myoblasts [1]. We then examined the appearance of TPA-resistant cells during human muscle histogenesis, since we had observed that differentiation of human myoblasts from a 6-week-old limb was completely and reversibly inhibited by 10(-7) M TPA. Differentiation of myoblasts from 6-, 7- and 8-week-old fetuses was completely inhibited by TPA. Myoblasts from 10-week-old limbs did not form myotubes in the presence of TPA; however, immunohistochemical staining with an antimyosin antibody revealed the presence of a few mononucleated myosin-positive cells which escaped the TPA-induced block of differentiation. At 12 weeks of development, a few oligonucleated, myosin-positive myotubes developed in cultures treated with TPA, and the level of AChR expressed (measured as [125I] alpha-bungarotoxin bound) reached 20% of controls. At 14 weeks of development, about half of the cells in culture were TPA-resistant and by 16 weeks of development no major differences could be detected between control and treated cells. We conclude from these data that a population of TPA-resistant myogenic cells emerges between the 10th and 14th week of human limb development and suggest that this population represents satellite cells.  相似文献   

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