Hox11-expressing interstitial cells contribute to adult skeletal muscle at homeostasis

Author:

Flynn Corey G. K.1ORCID,Ginkel Paul R. Van1ORCID,Hubert Katharine A.12ORCID,Guo Qingyuan13,Hrycaj Steven M.4,McDermott Aubrey E.1,Madruga Angelo1,Miller Anna P.1,Wellik Deneen M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health 1 Department of Cell and Regenerative Biology , , Madison, WI 53705 , USA

2. University of Wisconsin-Madison 2 Genetics Training Program , , Madison, WI 53703 , USA

3. University of Wisconsin-Madison 3 Cell and Molecular Biology Training Program , , Madison, WI 53705 , USA

4. University of Michigan 4 Department of Pathology , , Ann Arbor, MI 48109 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Interstitial stromal cells play critical roles in muscle development, regeneration and repair and we have previously reported that Hoxa11 and Hoxd11 are expressed in the interstitial cells of muscles attached to the zeugopod, and are crucial for the proper embryonic patterning of these muscles. Hoxa11eGFP expression continues in a subset of muscle interstitial cells through adult stages. The induction of Hoxa11-CreERT2-mediated lineage reporting (Hoxa11iTom) at adult stages in mouse results in lineage induction only in the interstitial cells. However, Hoxa11iTom+ cells progressively contribute to muscle fibers at subsequent stages. The contribution to myofibers exceeds parallel Pax7-CreERT2-mediated lineage labeling. Nuclear-specific lineage labeling demonstrates that Hoxa11-expressing interstitial cells contribute nuclear contents to myofibers. Crucially, at no point after Hoxa11iTom induction are satellite cells lineage labeled. When examined in vitro, isolated Hoxa11iTom+ interstitial cells are not capable of forming myotubes, but Hoxa11iTom+ cells can contribute to differentiating myotubes, supporting Hox-expressing interstitial cells as a new population of muscle progenitors, but not stem cells. This work adds to a small but growing body of evidence that supports a satellite cell-independent source of muscle tissue in vivo.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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