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Publication : Absence of the primary cilia formation gene Talpid3 impairs muscle stem cell function.

First Author  Martinez-Heredia V Year  2023
Journal  Commun Biol Volume  6
Issue  1 Pages  1121
PubMed ID  37925530 Mgi Jnum  J:342332
Mgi Id  MGI:7547599 Doi  10.1038/s42003-023-05503-9
Citation  Martinez-Heredia V, et al. (2023) Absence of the primary cilia formation gene Talpid3 impairs muscle stem cell function. Commun Biol 6(1):1121
abstractText  Skeletal muscle stem cells (MuSC) are crucial for tissue homoeostasis and repair after injury. Following activation, they proliferate to generate differentiating myoblasts. A proportion of cells self-renew, re-enter the MuSC niche under the basal lamina outside the myofiber and become quiescent. Quiescent MuSC have a primary cilium, which is disassembled upon cell cycle entry. Ex vivo experiments suggest cilia are important for MuSC self-renewal, however, their requirement for muscle regeneration in vivo remains poorly understood. Talpid3 (TA(3)) is essential for primary cilia formation and Hedgehog (Hh) signalling. Here we use tamoxifen-inducible conditional deletion of TA(3) in MuSC (iSC-KO) and show that regeneration is impaired in response to cytotoxic injury. Depletion of MuSC after regeneration suggests impaired self-renewal, also consistent with an exacerbated phenotype in TA(3iSC-KO) mice after repeat injury. Single cell transcriptomics of MuSC progeny isolated from myofibers identifies components of several signalling pathways, which are deregulated in absence of TA(3), including Hh and Wnt. Pharmacological activation of Wnt restores muscle regeneration, while purmorphamine, an activator of the Smoothened (Smo) co-receptor in the Hh pathway, has no effect. Together, our data show that TA(3) and primary cilia are important for MuSC self-renewal and pharmacological treatment can efficiently restore muscle regeneration.
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