首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Modification of mitochondrial metabolism in fibroblasts from mice with a skeletal muscle mutation (muscular dysgenesis). Evidence of embryonic communication between myoblasts and fibroblasts
Authors:Joffroy S  Letellier T  Rossignol R  Malgat M  Delage J P  Powell J A  Mazat J P  Koenig J
Affiliation:INSERM E 99-29, Mitochondrial Physiology, Université Bordeaux 2, France. sjoffroy@phys-mito.u-bordeaux2.fr
Abstract:Muscle development during embryogenesis is a complex process involving many mechanisms. It requires a close communication among the different cellular types of the muscle, especially the fibroblasts and myoblasts. Indeed, any abnormality in one cell type might influence the differentiation of the other. Thus, any disturbance altering the metabolism of the myoblasts might lead to modifications in the fibroblasts. To study this phenomenon, we used the dysgenic mouse (mdg-"muscular dysgenesis") carrying a homozygous recessive lethal mutation expressed only in skeletal muscle cells. First, we found that fibroblasts isolated from such mutant muscle (and not from mutant skin tissue) and grown in culture exhibited an altered metabolism. Secondly, muscle fibroblasts showed a lower capacity for proliferation. We also observed that respiration and ATP synthesis of dysgenic muscle fibroblasts were deficient, while respiratory chain enzymatic activities were normal. Finally, intracellular [Ca2+] levels of dysgenic fibroblasts are 50% of those of normal fibroblasts. These results support the hypothesis that certain characteristics of fibroblasts are determined by the surrounding cellular environment during embryonic organogenesis, and that such modifications are stable when the fibroblasts are isolated in vitro. Since fibroblast differentiation was disrupted permanently, this suggests, in the case of myopathies, that the modified cells, surrounding the muscle tissue, could contribute to the muscle pathology. Synergistic activities of this type should be considered when studying the course of pathologies in different types of muscle diseases.
Keywords:
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号