Fate decision of satellite cell differentiation and self-renewal by miR-31-IL34 axis

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Abstract

Quiescent satellite cells (SCs) that are activated to produce numerous myoblasts underpin the complete healing of damaged skeletal muscle. How cell-autonomous regulatory mechanisms modulate the balance among cells committed to differentiation and those committed to self-renewal to maintain the stem cell pool remains poorly explored. Here, we show that miR-31 inactivation compromises muscle regeneration in adult mice by impairing the expansion of myoblasts. miR-31 is pivotal for SC proliferation, and its deletion promotes asymmetric cell fate segregation of proliferating cells, resulting in enhanced myogenic commitment and re-entry into quiescence. Further analysis revealed that miR-31 posttranscriptionally suppresses interleukin 34 (IL34) mRNA, the protein product of which activates JAK–STAT3 signaling required for myogenic progression. IL34 inhibition rescues the regenerative deficiency of miR-31 knockout mice. Our results provide evidence that targeting miR-31 or IL34 activities in SCs could be used to counteract the functional exhaustion of SCs in pathological conditions.

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Su, Y., Yu, Y., Liu, C., Zhang, Y., Liu, C., Ge, M., … Meng, Q. (2020). Fate decision of satellite cell differentiation and self-renewal by miR-31-IL34 axis. Cell Death and Differentiation, 27(3), 949–965. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41418-019-0390-x

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