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Dlk1 Is Necessary for Proper Skeletal Muscle Development and Regeneration

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-05-26, 00:00 authored by Jolena N. Waddell, Peijing Zhang, Yefei Wen, Sanjay K. Gupta, Aleksey Yevtodiyenko, Jennifer V. Schmidt, Christopher A. Bidwell, Ashok Kumar, Shihuan Kuang
Delta-like 1homolog (Dlk1) is an imprinted gene encoding a transmembrane protein whose increased expression has been associated with muscle hypertrophy in animal models. However, the mechanisms by which Dlk1 regulates skeletal muscle plasticity remain unknown. Here we combine conditional gene knockout and over-expression analyses to investigate the role of Dlk1 in mouse muscle development, regeneration and myogenic stem cells (satellite cells). Genetic ablation of Dlk1 in the myogenic lineage resulted in reduced body weight and skeletal muscle mass due to reductions in myofiber numbers and myosin heavy chain IIB gene expression. In addition, muscle-specific Dlk1 ablation led to postnatal growth retardation and impaired muscle regeneration, associated with augmented myogenic inhibitory signaling mediated by NF-kappa B and inflammatory cytokines. To examine the role of Dlk1 in satellite cells, we analyzed the proliferation, self-renewal and differentiation of satellite cells cultured on their native host myofibers. We showed that ablation of Dlk1 inhibits the expression of the myogenic regulatory transcription factor MyoD, and facilitated the self-renewal of activated satellite cells. Conversely, Dlk1 over-expression inhibited the proliferation and enhanced differentiation of cultured myoblasts. As Dlk1 is expressed at low levels in satellite cells but its expression rapidly increases upon myogenic differentiation in vitro and in regenerating muscles in vivo, our results suggest a model in which Dlk1 expressed by nascent or regenerating myofibers non-cell autonomously promotes the differentiation of their neighbor satellite cells and therefore leads to muscle hypertrophy.

Funding

The work was funded by National Institutes of Health grant # 1R01AR060652-01A1 to SK and grant # HD042013 to JVS; Muscular Dystrophy Association grant # 92478 to SK; United States Department of Agriculture - National Research Initiative Grant # 2009-35206-05218 to SK.

History

Publisher Statement

The original source for this publication is at Public Library of Science; DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0015055. Copyright: © 2010 Waddell et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Language

  • en_US

issn

1932-6203

Issue date

2010-11-29

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