β4 Integrin Marks Interstitial Myogenic Progenitor Cells in Adult Murine Skeletal Muscle

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Abstract

Skeletal muscle growth and its regeneration following injury rely on myogenic progenitor cells, a heterogeneous population that includes the satellite cells and other interstitial progenitors. The present study demonstrates that surface expression of β4 integrin marks a population of vessel-associated interstitial muscle progenitor cells. Muscle β4 integrin-positive cells do not express myogenic markers upon isolation. However, they are capable of undergoing myogenic specification in vitro and in vivo: β4 integrin cells differentiate into multinucleated myotubes in culture dishes and contribute to muscle regeneration upon delivery into diseased mice. Subfractionation of β4 integrin-expressing cells based on CD31 expression does not further enrich for myogenic precursors. These findings support the expression of β4 integrin in interstitial, vessel-associated cells with myogenic activity within adult skeletal muscle. © The Histochemical Society 2012.

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Liadaki, K., Casar, J. C., Wessen, M., Luth, E. S., Jun, S., Gussoni, E., & Kunkel, L. M. (2012). β4 Integrin Marks Interstitial Myogenic Progenitor Cells in Adult Murine Skeletal Muscle. Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, 60(1), 31–44. https://doi.org/10.1369/0022155411428991

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