4.3 Article

Preservation of satellite cell number and regenerative potential with age reveals locomotory muscle bias

Journal

SKELETAL MUSCLE
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13395-021-00277-2

Keywords

Satellite cells; Regeneration; Transplantation

Categories

Funding

  1. Muscular Dystrophy Association [MDA351022]
  2. NIH/National Institute on Aging [R21 AG034370, R01 AG031743, R01 AG062899]
  3. NIH/National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases [R01 AR055685, T32 AR007612]

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Although muscle regenerative capacity declines with age, the number of satellite cells in most muscles does not significantly decrease by 2 years of age, with the masseter muscle even showing a modest increase. However, hindlimb muscles like the tibialis anterior and extensor digitorum longus experience significant declines. Self-renewal impairment with age appears to be acquired rapidly at the geriatric stage rather than gradually over time.
Background Although muscle regenerative capacity declines with age, the extent to which this is due to satellite cell-intrinsic changes vs. environmental changes has been controversial. The majority of aging studies have investigated hindlimb locomotory muscles, principally the tibialis anterior, in caged sedentary mice, where those muscles are abnormally under-exercised. Methods We analyze satellite cell numbers in 8 muscle groups representing locomotory and non-locomotory muscles in young and 2-year-old mice and perform transplantation assays of low numbers of hind limb satellite cells from young and old mice. Results We find that satellite cell density does not decline significantly by 2 years of age in most muscles, and one muscle, the masseter, shows a modest but statistically significant increase in satellite cell density with age. The tibialis anterior and extensor digitorum longus were clear exceptions, showing significant declines. We quantify self-renewal using a transplantation assay. Dose dilution revealed significant non-linearity in self-renewal above a very low threshold, suggestive of competition between satellite cells for space within the pool. Assaying within the linear range, i.e., transplanting fewer than 1000 cells, revealed no evidence of decline in cell-autonomous self-renewal or regenerative potential of 2-year-old murine satellite cells. Conclusion These data demonstrate the value of comparative muscle analysis as opposed to overreliance on locomotory muscles, which are not used physiologically in aging sedentary mice, and suggest that self-renewal impairment with age is precipitously acquired at the geriatric stage, rather than being gradual over time, as previously thought.

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