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      Molecular aging and rejuvenation of human muscle stem cells

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          Abstract

          Very little remains known about the regulation of human organ stem cells (in general, and during the aging process), and most previous data were collected in short-lived rodents. We examined whether stem cell aging in rodents could be extrapolated to genetically and environmentally variable humans. Our findings establish key evolutionarily conserved mechanisms of human stem cell aging. We find that satellite cells are maintained in aged human skeletal muscle, but fail to activate in response to muscle attrition, due to diminished activation of Notch compounded by elevated transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β)/phospho Smad3 (pSmad3). Furthermore, this work reveals that mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)/phosphate extracellular signal-regulated kinase (pERK) signalling declines in human muscle with age, and is important for activating Notch in human muscle stem cells. This molecular understanding, combined with data that human satellite cells remain intrinsically young, introduced novel therapeutic targets. Indeed, activation of MAPK/Notch restored ‘youthful’ myogenic responses to satellite cells from 70-year-old humans, rendering them similar to cells from 20-year-old humans. These findings strongly suggest that aging of human muscle maintenance and repair can be reversed by ‘youthful’ calibration of specific molecular pathways.

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          Notch-mediated restoration of regenerative potential to aged muscle.

          A hallmark of aging is diminished regenerative potential of tissues, but the mechanism of this decline is unknown. Analysis of injured muscle revealed that, with age, resident precursor cells (satellite cells) had a markedly impaired propensity to proliferate and to produce myoblasts necessary for muscle regeneration. This was due to insufficient up-regulation of the Notch ligand Delta and, thus, diminished activation of Notch in aged, regenerating muscle. Inhibition of Notch impaired regeneration of young muscle, whereas forced activation of Notch restored regenerative potential to old muscle. Thus, Notch signaling is a key determinant of muscle regenerative potential that declines with age.
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            The regulation of Notch signaling controls satellite cell activation and cell fate determination in postnatal myogenesis.

            We have studied the role of Notch-1 and its antagonist Numb in the activation of satellite cells during postnatal myogenesis. Activation of Notch-1 promoted the proliferation of myogenic precursor cells expressing the premyoblast marker Pax3. Attenuation of Notch signaling by increases in Numb expression led to the commitment of progenitor cells to the myoblast cell fate and the expression of myogenic regulatory factors, desmin, and Pax7. In many intermediate progenitor cells, Numb was localized asymmetrically in actively dividing cells, suggesting an asymmetric cell division and divergent cell fates of daughter cells. The results indicate that satellite cell activation results in a heterogeneous population of precursor cells with respect to Notch-1 activity and that the balance between Notch-1 and Numb controls cellular homeostasis and cell fate determination.
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              Muscle fiber types: how many and what kind?

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                EMBO Mol Med
                EMBO Mol Med
                emmm
                EMBO Molecular Medicine
                WILEY-VCH Verlag (Weinheim )
                1757-4676
                1757-4684
                November 2009
                : 1
                : 8-9
                : 381-391
                Affiliations
                [1 ]simpleDepartment of Bioengineering, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley CA, USA
                [2 ]simpleInstitute of Sports Medicine and Centre of Healthy Aging, Faculty of Health Science, University of Copenhagen Denmark
                [3 ]simpleInstitute of Sports Sciences and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern Denmark
                Author notes
                * Corresponding author: Tel: +1 510 666 2792; Fax: +1 510 642 5835; E-mail: iconboy@ 123456berkeley.edu
                Article
                10.1002/emmm.200900045
                2875071
                20049743
                db778486-517d-4f80-896f-a8e9b9e057dc
                Copyright © 2009 EMBO Molecular Medicine
                History
                : 10 February 2009
                : 02 July 2009
                : 28 August 2009
                Categories
                Research Articles

                Molecular medicine
                muscle,notch,satellite cell,aging,mapk/erk
                Molecular medicine
                muscle, notch, satellite cell, aging, mapk/erk

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