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Reduced Notch signalling leads to postnatal skeletal muscle hypertrophy in Pofut1(cax/cax) mice

Postnatal skeletal muscle growth results from the activation of satellite cells and/or an increase in protein synthesis. The Notch signalling pathway maintains satellite cells in a quiescent state, and once activated, sustains their proliferation and commitment towards differentiation. In mammals, P...

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Autores principales: Al Jaam, Bilal, Heu, Katy, Pennarubia, Florian, Segelle, Alexandre, Magnol, Laetitia, Germot, Agnès, Legardinier, Sébastien, Blanquet, Véronique, Maftah, Abderrahman
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5043585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27628322
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsob.160211
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author Al Jaam, Bilal
Heu, Katy
Pennarubia, Florian
Segelle, Alexandre
Magnol, Laetitia
Germot, Agnès
Legardinier, Sébastien
Blanquet, Véronique
Maftah, Abderrahman
author_facet Al Jaam, Bilal
Heu, Katy
Pennarubia, Florian
Segelle, Alexandre
Magnol, Laetitia
Germot, Agnès
Legardinier, Sébastien
Blanquet, Véronique
Maftah, Abderrahman
author_sort Al Jaam, Bilal
collection PubMed
description Postnatal skeletal muscle growth results from the activation of satellite cells and/or an increase in protein synthesis. The Notch signalling pathway maintains satellite cells in a quiescent state, and once activated, sustains their proliferation and commitment towards differentiation. In mammals, POFUT1-mediated O-fucosylation regulates the interactions between NOTCH receptors and ligands of the DELTA/JAGGED family, thus initiating the activation of canonical Notch signalling. Here, we analysed the consequences of downregulated expression of the Pofut1 gene on postnatal muscle growth in mutant Pofut1(cax/cax) (cax, compact axial skeleton) mice and differentiation of their satellite cell-derived myoblasts (SCDMs). Pofut1(cax/cax) mice exhibited muscle hypertrophy, no hyperplasia and a decrease in satellite cell numbers compared with wild-type C3H mice. In agreement with these observations, Pofut1(cax/cax) SCDMs differentiated earlier concomitant with reduced Pax7 expression and decrease in PAX7(+)/MYOD(−) progenitor cells. In vitro binding assays showed a reduced interaction of DELTA-LIKE 1 ligand (DLL1) with NOTCH receptors expressed at the cell surface of SCDMs, leading to a decreased Notch signalling as seen by the quantification of cleaved NICD and Notch target genes. These results demonstrated that POFUT1-mediated O-fucosylation of NOTCH receptors regulates myogenic cell differentiation and affects postnatal muscle growth in mice.
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spelling pubmed-50435852016-10-05 Reduced Notch signalling leads to postnatal skeletal muscle hypertrophy in Pofut1(cax/cax) mice Al Jaam, Bilal Heu, Katy Pennarubia, Florian Segelle, Alexandre Magnol, Laetitia Germot, Agnès Legardinier, Sébastien Blanquet, Véronique Maftah, Abderrahman Open Biol Research Postnatal skeletal muscle growth results from the activation of satellite cells and/or an increase in protein synthesis. The Notch signalling pathway maintains satellite cells in a quiescent state, and once activated, sustains their proliferation and commitment towards differentiation. In mammals, POFUT1-mediated O-fucosylation regulates the interactions between NOTCH receptors and ligands of the DELTA/JAGGED family, thus initiating the activation of canonical Notch signalling. Here, we analysed the consequences of downregulated expression of the Pofut1 gene on postnatal muscle growth in mutant Pofut1(cax/cax) (cax, compact axial skeleton) mice and differentiation of their satellite cell-derived myoblasts (SCDMs). Pofut1(cax/cax) mice exhibited muscle hypertrophy, no hyperplasia and a decrease in satellite cell numbers compared with wild-type C3H mice. In agreement with these observations, Pofut1(cax/cax) SCDMs differentiated earlier concomitant with reduced Pax7 expression and decrease in PAX7(+)/MYOD(−) progenitor cells. In vitro binding assays showed a reduced interaction of DELTA-LIKE 1 ligand (DLL1) with NOTCH receptors expressed at the cell surface of SCDMs, leading to a decreased Notch signalling as seen by the quantification of cleaved NICD and Notch target genes. These results demonstrated that POFUT1-mediated O-fucosylation of NOTCH receptors regulates myogenic cell differentiation and affects postnatal muscle growth in mice. The Royal Society 2016-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC5043585/ /pubmed/27628322 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsob.160211 Text en © 2016 The Authors. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research
Al Jaam, Bilal
Heu, Katy
Pennarubia, Florian
Segelle, Alexandre
Magnol, Laetitia
Germot, Agnès
Legardinier, Sébastien
Blanquet, Véronique
Maftah, Abderrahman
Reduced Notch signalling leads to postnatal skeletal muscle hypertrophy in Pofut1(cax/cax) mice
title Reduced Notch signalling leads to postnatal skeletal muscle hypertrophy in Pofut1(cax/cax) mice
title_full Reduced Notch signalling leads to postnatal skeletal muscle hypertrophy in Pofut1(cax/cax) mice
title_fullStr Reduced Notch signalling leads to postnatal skeletal muscle hypertrophy in Pofut1(cax/cax) mice
title_full_unstemmed Reduced Notch signalling leads to postnatal skeletal muscle hypertrophy in Pofut1(cax/cax) mice
title_short Reduced Notch signalling leads to postnatal skeletal muscle hypertrophy in Pofut1(cax/cax) mice
title_sort reduced notch signalling leads to postnatal skeletal muscle hypertrophy in pofut1(cax/cax) mice
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5043585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27628322
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsob.160211
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