Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Discovery Center for Musculoskeletal Recovery, Schoen Adams Research Institute at Spaulding, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Toxicol Sci. 2023 Sep 28;195(2):231-245. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/kfad075.
Chronic exposure to environmental arsenic is a public health crisis affecting hundreds of millions of individuals worldwide. Though arsenic is known to contribute to many pathologies and diseases, including cancers, cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases, and neurological impairment, the mechanisms for arsenic-promoted disease remain unresolved. This is especially true for arsenic impacts on skeletal muscle function and metabolism, despite the crucial role that skeletal muscle health plays in maintaining cardiovascular health, systemic homeostasis, and cognition. A barrier to researching this area is the challenge of interrogating muscle cell-specific effects in biologically relevant models. Ex vivo studies investigating mechanisms for muscle-specific responses to arsenic or other environmental contaminants primarily utilize traditional 2-dimensional culture models that cannot elucidate effects on muscle physiology or function. Therefore, we developed a contractile 3-dimensional muscle construct model-composed of primary mouse muscle progenitor cells differentiated in a hydrogel matrix-to study arsenic exposure impacts on skeletal muscle regeneration. Muscle constructs exposed to low-dose (50 nM) arsenic exhibited reduced strength and myofiber diameter following recovery from muscle injury. These effects were attributable to dysfunctional paracrine signaling mediated by extracellular vesicles (EVs) released from muscle cells. Specifically, we found that EVs collected from arsenic-exposed muscle constructs recapitulated the inhibitory effects of direct arsenic exposure on myofiber regeneration. In addition, muscle constructs treated with EVs isolated from muscles of arsenic-exposed mice displayed significantly decreased strength. Our findings highlight a novel model for muscle toxicity research and uncover a mechanism of arsenic-induced muscle dysfunction by the disruption of EV-mediated intercellular communication.
慢性暴露于环境砷是一个影响全球数亿人的公共健康危机。尽管砷已知会导致许多病理学和疾病,包括癌症、心血管和肺部疾病以及神经损伤,但砷促进疾病的机制仍未解决。这尤其适用于砷对骨骼肌功能和代谢的影响,尽管骨骼肌健康在维持心血管健康、全身内稳态和认知方面起着至关重要的作用。研究这一领域的一个障碍是在具有生物学相关性的模型中探究肌肉细胞特异性影响的挑战。体外研究调查砷或其他环境污染物对肌肉特异性反应的机制主要利用传统的 2 维培养模型,无法阐明对肌肉生理学或功能的影响。因此,我们开发了一种可收缩的 3 维肌肉构建模型-由在水凝胶基质中分化的原代小鼠肌肉祖细胞组成-用于研究砷暴露对骨骼肌再生的影响。从肌肉损伤中恢复后,暴露于低剂量(50nM)砷的肌肉构建体表现出强度降低和肌纤维直径减小。这些影响归因于肌肉细胞释放的细胞外囊泡(EVs)介导的功能障碍旁分泌信号。具体而言,我们发现,从砷暴露的肌肉构建体中收集的 EVs 再现了直接砷暴露对肌纤维再生的抑制作用。此外,用从砷暴露的小鼠肌肉中分离的 EVs 处理的肌肉构建体显示出明显降低的强度。我们的研究结果强调了一种用于肌肉毒性研究的新型模型,并揭示了通过破坏 EV 介导的细胞间通讯导致砷诱导的肌肉功能障碍的机制。