Muscle composition is regulated by a lox-TGFβ feedback loop

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Abstract

Muscle is an integrated tissue composed of distinct cell types and extracellular matrix. While much emphasis has been placed on the factors required for the specification of the cells that comprise muscle, little is known about the crosstalk between them that enables the development of a patterned and functional tissue.We find in mice that deletion of lysyl oxidase (Lox), an extracellular enzyme regulating collagen maturation and organization, uncouples the balance between the amount of myofibers and that of muscle connective tissue (MCT). We show that Lox secreted from the myofibers attenuates TGFβ signaling, an inhibitor of myofiber differentiation and promoter of MCT development. We further demonstrate that a TGFβ-Lox feedback loop between the MCT and myofibers maintains the dynamic developmental homeostasis between muscle components while also regulating MCT organization. Our results allow a better understanding of diseases such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy, in which LOX and TGFβ signaling have been implicated and the balance between muscle constituents is disturbed.

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Kutchuk, L., Laitala, A., Soueid-Bomgarten, S., Shentzer, P., Rosendahl, A. H., Eilot, S., … Hasson, P. (2015). Muscle composition is regulated by a lox-TGFβ feedback loop. Development (Cambridge), 142(5), 983–993. https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.113449

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