Department of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyushu University, Higashi, Fukuoka, Japan.
Anim Sci J. 2010 Feb;81(1):11-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1740-0929.2009.00712.x.
In undamaged postnatal muscle fibers with normal contraction and relaxation activities, quiescent satellite cells of resident myogenic stem cells are interposed between the overlying external lamina and the sarcolemma of a subjacent mature muscle fiber. When muscle is injured, exercised, overused or mechanically stretched, these cells are activated to enter the cell proliferation cycle, divide, differentiate, and fuse with the adjacent muscle fiber, and are responsible for regeneration and work-induced hypertrophy of muscle fibers. Therefore, a mechanism must exist to translate mechanical changes in muscle tissue into chemical signals that can activate satellite cells. Recent studies of satellite cells or single muscle fibers in culture and in vivo demonstrated the essential role of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and nitric oxide (NO) radical in the activation pathway. These experiments have also reported that mechanically stretching satellite cells or living skeletal muscles triggers the activation by rapid release of HGF from its extracellular tethering and the subsequent presentation to the receptor c-met. HGF release has been shown to rely on calcium-calmodulin formation and NO radical production in satellite cells and/or muscle fibers in response to the mechanical perturbation, and depend on the subsequent up-regulation of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity. These results indicate that the activation mechanism is a cascade of events including calcium ion influx, calcium-calmodulin formation, NO synthase activation, NO radical production, MMP activation, HGF release and binding to c-met. Better understanding of 'mechano-biology' on the satellite cell activation is essential for designing procedures that could enhance muscle growth and repair activities in meat-animal agriculture and also in neuromuscular disease and aging in humans.
在未受损的出生后肌肉纤维中,正常的收缩和松弛活动中,静止的卫星细胞位于位于上层外部层和下方成熟肌肉纤维的肌膜之间。当肌肉受伤、运动、过度使用或机械拉伸时,这些细胞被激活进入细胞增殖周期,分裂、分化,并与相邻的肌肉纤维融合,负责肌肉纤维的再生和运动引起的肥大。因此,必须存在一种机制将肌肉组织中的机械变化转化为可以激活卫星细胞的化学信号。最近对培养物和体内的卫星细胞或单个肌肉纤维的研究表明,肝细胞生长因子 (HGF) 和一氧化氮 (NO) 自由基在激活途径中起重要作用。这些实验还报告说,机械拉伸卫星细胞或活体骨骼肌会触发 HGF 从其细胞外固定中快速释放,并随后呈现给受体 c-met,从而激活卫星细胞。已经表明 HGF 释放依赖于钙调蛋白形成和 NO 自由基的产生在卫星细胞和/或肌肉纤维中对机械扰动的反应,并依赖于随后基质金属蛋白酶 (MMP) 活性的上调。这些结果表明,激活机制是一系列事件,包括钙离子内流、钙调蛋白形成、NOS 激活、NO 自由基产生、MMP 激活、HGF 释放和与 c-met 结合。更好地了解卫星细胞激活的“机械生物学”对于设计可以增强肉用动物农业中的肌肉生长和修复活动以及人类中的神经肌肉疾病和衰老的程序至关重要。