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Regenerative Capacity of Old Muscle Stem Cells Declines without Significant Accumulation of DNA Damage.
PLoS One. 2013 May 21;8(5):e63528. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0063528
Cousin W, Ho ML, Desai R, Tham A, Chen RY, Kung S, Elabd C, Conboy IM
Abstract:
.....This work demonstrates that old muscle stem cells display no significant accumulation of DNA DSBs when compared to those of young, as assayed after cell isolation and in tissue sections, either in uninjured muscle or at multiple time points after injury. Additionally, there is no significant difference in the expression of DNA DSB repair proteins or globally assayed DNA damage response genes, suggesting that not only DNA DSBs, but also other types of DNA damage, do not significantly mark aged muscle stem cells. Satellite cells from DNA DSB-repair-deficient SCID mice do have an unsurprisingly higher level of innate DNA DSBs and a weakened recovery from gamma-radiation-induced DNA damage. Interestingly, they are as myogenic in vitro and in vivo as satellite cells from young wild type mice, suggesting that the inefficiency in DNA DSB repair does not directly correlate with the ability to regenerate muscle after injury. Overall, our findings suggest that a DNA DSB-repair deficiency is unlikely to be a key factor in the decline in muscle regeneration observed upon aging.
PMID: 23704914
Free Full-Text: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23704914/
Tags: DNA damage, muscle