Scientists harness a natural emergency response to increase the regeneration ability of
muscle
Press
Release 17 December 2007 [PDF]
It does not take much to
injure a muscle. Sometimes one sudden, inconsiderate movement
does the job. Unfortunately, damaged muscles are not as
efficient at repair as other tissues such as bone. Researchers of
the European Molecular Biology Laboratory's Mouse Biology
Unit [EMBL], Italy, and the Harefield Heart Science Centre of
Imperial College London, have now discovered a molecular
signal that helps muscle regenerate and protects it from atrophy.
In this week's issue of the Journal of Cell Biology, they
report that the naturally occurring protein is a promising candidate
for new strategies in treating muscle damage and wasting.
Muscle regeneration after injury is complex and requires a
coordinated interplay between many different processes. Key
players in regeneration are muscle stem cells, so-called satellite
cells. They divide and produce many new muscle cells to
fix the damage incurred by injury. A crucial regulator of muscle
function and repair is a signalling molecule called calcineurin.
It is activated by injury and controls the activity of
other key proteins involved in differentiation and the response
to damage.
Nadia Rosenthal, head of EMBL's Mouse Biology Unit, and
her team have now found a naturally occurring version of calcineurin,
called CnAß1, that is permanently active and uncouples
the protein's activity from injury signals. The expression
of CnAß1, however, is tightly regulated. It is expressed from
the same gene as other versions of the calcineurin Aß subunit
that are not permanently active. CnAß1 gains its unique properties
by a process called RNA splicing. When the gene has
been copied from DNA into RNA, certain pieces of information
are cut out of the RNA molecule and will not make part
of the protein. This is why CnAß1 lacks a regulatory site that
normally represses its activity.
"This system allows flexible reaction to muscle injury," says
Rosenthal. "Permanently active CnAß1 is expressed only in
proliferating stem cells and regenerating muscles, suggesting it
as something like an ambulance man that is called only in
response to muscle damage."
To test the effects of permanent CnAß1 expression Enrique
Lara-Pezzi from Rosenthal's lab overexpessed CnAß1 in muscle
cells, and observed increased proliferation of muscle stem
cells. Switching off the protein had the opposite effect; stem
cells stopped dividing and differentiated into muscle cells
instead. When CnAß1 was overexpressed in the muscles of
transgenic mice, the animals were resistant to the destructive
effects of muscle injury and regenerated the damage more efficiently.
Using sophisticated molecular techniques, the scientists
revealed that calcineurin accomplishes its effect on muscle by
inhibiting another protein called FoxO. FoxO is a transcription
factor, a protein that plays a crucial role in skeletal muscle
atrophy through the induction of genes involved in cell
cycle repression and protein degradation. Suppressing the
effects of FoxO, calcineurin ensures that proliferating cells
stay alive and keep dividing to produce enough cells to repair
muscle damage.
"Supplementary CnAß1 also reduces the formation of scars in
damaged muscle, helps speed up the resolution of inflammation
and protects muscle cells from atrophy under starvation,"
says Rosenthal. "These effects make CnAß1 a promising candidate
for new therapeutic approaches against muscle wasting."
Souce Article
E. Lara-Pezzi, N. Winn, A. Paul, K. McCullagh, E. Slominsky, M. Santini, F. Mourkioti, P. Sarathchandra, S. Fukushima, K. Suzuki and
N. Rosenthal, A naturally occurring calcineurin variant inhibits FoxO activity and enhances skeletal muscle regeneration, Journal of
Cell Biology, 17 December 2007
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EMBL Heidelberg
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Email: wegener@embl.de |