The bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)-2 is a potent osteoinductive signal, inducing bone formation in vivo and osteoblast differentiation from non-osseous cells in vitro. The runt domain-related protein Cbfa1/PEBP2␣A/ AML-3 is a critical component of bone formation in vivo and transcriptional regulat
FGF6 mediated expansion of a resident subset of cells with SP phenotype in the C2C12 myogenic line
✍ Scribed by David Israeli; Rachid Benchaouir; Simindokht Ziaei; Philippe Rameau; Carole Gruszczynski; Elise Peltekian; Olivier Danos; Luis Garcia
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 567 KB
- Volume
- 201
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9541
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Fibroblast growth factor 6 (FGF6) is selectively expressed during muscle development and regeneration. We examined its effect on muscle precursor cells (mpc) by forcing stable FGF6 expression in C2C12 cells in vitro. FGF6 produced in genetically engineered mpc was active, inducing strong morphological changes, altering cell adhesion and compromising their ability to differentiate into myotubes. Expression of MyoD and myogenin, but not of Myf5, was abrogated in FGF6 engineered mpc. These effects were reversed by FGF inhibitors. Ectopic expression of MyoD also restored fiber formation indicating that FGF6 interferes with the myogenic differentiation pathway upstream of MyoD. We also report that in the presence of FGF6, the minor (0.5–2%) subpopulation of cells actively excluding Hoechst 33342 in a verapamil‐dependent manner (SP phenotype) was increased to 15–20% and the expression of the mdr1a gene (but not mdr1b) was upregulated by 400‐fold. Our data establish a previously undescribed link between FGF6—a muscle specific growth factor—and a multidrug resistance gene expressed in stem cells, and suggest a role for FGF6 in the maintenance of a reserve pool of progenitor cells in the skeletal muscle. © 2004 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES