4.6 Article

Benefits and pathologies associated with the inflammatory response

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH
Volume 409, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2021.112905

Keywords

Skeletal muscle regeneration; Inflammation; Macrophages; Stem cell niche; Muscular dystrophies

Funding

  1. AFM-Telethon (MyoNeurALP alliance)
  2. Agence Nationale pour la Recherche
  3. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale [DEQ20140329495]
  4. EU H2020 program
  5. RENOIR Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellows in Innovative Training Networks

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This article discusses the regeneration process of adult skeletal muscle after injury and the role of immune cells, particularly macrophages, in supporting muscle regeneration. It highlights the issues caused by inflammation in muscle diseases and explores how targeting the inflammatory compartment can improve muscle regeneration.
Adult skeletal muscle regenerates completely after a damage, thanks to the satellite cells, or muscle stem cells (MuSCs), that implement the adult myogenic program. This program is sustained by both robust intrinsic mechanisms and extrinsic cues coming from the close neighborhood of MuSCs during muscle regeneration. Among the various cell types present in the regenerating muscle, immune cells, and particularly macrophages, exert numerous functions and provide sequential transient niches to support the myogenic program. The adequate orchestration of the delivery of these cues ensures efficient muscle regeneration and full functional recovery. The situation is very different in muscular dystrophies where asynchronous and permanent microinjuries occur, triggering contradictory regenerating cues at the same time in a specific area, that lead to chronic inflammation and fibrogenesis. Here we review the beneficial effects that leukocytes, and particularly macrophages, exert on their neighboring cells during skeletal muscle regeneration after an acute injury. Then, the more complicated (and less beneficial) roles of leukocytes during muscular dystrophies are presented. Finally, we discuss how the inflammatory compartment may be a target to improve muscle regeneration in both acute muscle injury and muscle diseases.

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