Nitric Oxide Sustains Long-Term Skeletal Muscle Regeneration by Regulating Fate of Satellite Cells Via Signaling Pathways Requiring Vangl2 and Cyclic GMP

Author:

Buono Roberta12,Vantaggiato Chiara3,Pisa Viviana12,Azzoni Emanuele14,Bassi Maria Teresa3,Brunelli Silvia14,Sciorati Clara1,Clementi Emilio23

Affiliation:

1. Division of Regenerative Medicine, San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milano, Italy

2. Unit of Clinical Pharmacology, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Institute of Neuroscience, Department of Clinical Sciences L.Sacco, University Hospital “Luigi Sacco,” Università di Milano, Milan, Italy

3. E. Medea Scientific Institute, Bosisio Parini, Lecco, Italy

4. Department of Experimental Medicine, University of Milano-Bicocca, Monza, Italy

Abstract

Abstract Satellite cells are myogenic precursors that proliferate, activate, and differentiate on muscle injury to sustain the regenerative capacity of adult skeletal muscle; in this process, they self-renew through the return to quiescence of the cycling progeny. This mechanism, while efficient in physiological conditions does not prevent exhaustion of satellite cells in pathologies such as muscular dystrophy where numerous rounds of damage occur. Here, we describe a key role of nitric oxide, an important signaling molecule in adult skeletal muscle, on satellite cells maintenance, studied ex vivo on isolated myofibers and in vivo using the α-sarcoglycan null mouse model of dystrophy and a cardiotoxin-induced model of repetitive damage. Nitric oxide stimulated satellite cells proliferation in a pathway dependent on cGMP generation. Furthermore, it increased the number of Pax7+/Myf5− cells in a cGMP-independent pathway requiring enhanced expression of Vangl2, a member of the planar cell polarity pathway involved in the Wnt noncanonical pathway. The enhanced self-renewal ability of satellite cells induced by nitric oxide is sufficient to delay the reduction of the satellite cell pool during repetitive acute and chronic damages, favoring muscle regeneration; in the α-sarcoglycan null dystrophic mouse, it also slowed disease progression persistently. These results identify nitric oxide as a key messenger in satellite cells maintenance, expand the significance of the Vangl2-dependent Wnt noncanonical pathway in myogenesis, and indicate novel strategies to optimize nitric oxide-based therapies for muscular dystrophy. Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest is found at the end of this article.

Funder

Telethon Italia

The European Community's framework program

Italian Ministry of Health

Associazione Italiana Ricerca sul Cancro

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

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