4.8 Article

Cytoglobin modulates myogenic progenitor cell viability and muscle regeneration

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1314962111

Keywords

myogenesis; myocyte differentiation/proliferation; nuclear protein; redox signaling

Funding

  1. American Heart Association (AHA)-South Central Affiliate Postdoctoral Research Fellowship [09POST2260759]
  2. AHA-South Central Affiliate Postdoctoral Research Fellowship [11POST7620124]
  3. AHA-South Central Affiliate Beginning [0655202Y]
  4. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 HL-072016, R01 HL-097768]
  5. AHA-South Central Affiliate [BGIA 0565085Y, 09GRNT2250797]
  6. Donald W. Reynolds Clinical Cardiovascular Research Center at University of Texas Southwestern
  7. GlaxoSmithKline Research Foundation
  8. NIH [K08/R01 HL-076440, HL-102478]

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Mammalian skeletal muscle can remodel, repair, and regenerate itself by mobilizing satellite cells, a resident population of myogenic progenitor cells. Muscle injury and subsequent activation of myogenic progenitor cells is associated with oxidative stress. Cytoglobin is a hemoprotein expressed in response to oxidative stress in a variety of tissues, including striated muscle. In this study, we demonstrate that cytoglobin is up-regulated in activated myogenic progenitor cells, where it localizes to the nucleus and contributes to cell viability. siRNA-mediated depletion of cytoglobin from C2C12 myoblasts increased levels of reactive oxygen species and apoptotic cell death both at baseline and in response to stress stimuli. Conversely, overexpression of cytoglobin reduced reactive oxygen species levels, caspase activity, and cell death. Mice in which cytoglobin was knocked out specifically in skeletal muscle were generated to examine the role of cytoglobin in vivo. Myogenic progenitor cells isolated from these mice were severely deficient in their ability to form myotubes as compared with myogenic progenitor cells from wild-type littermates. Consistent with this finding, the capacity for muscle regeneration was severely impaired in mice deficient for skeletal-muscle cytoglobin. Collectively, these data demonstrate that cytoglobin serves an important role in muscle repair and regeneration.

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