FoxO maintains a genuine muscle stem-cell quiescent state until geriatric age

Tissue regeneration declines with ageing but little is known about whether this arises from changes in stem-cell heterogeneity. Here, in homeostatic skeletal muscle, we identify two quiescent stem-cell states distinguished by relative CD34 expression: CD34 High , with stemness properties (genuine st...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature cell biology 2020-11, Vol.22 (11), p.1307-1318
Hauptverfasser: García-Prat, Laura, Perdiguero, Eusebio, Alonso-Martín, Sonia, Dell’Orso, Stefania, Ravichandran, Srikanth, Brooks, Stephen R., Juan, Aster H., Campanario, Silvia, Jiang, Kan, Hong, Xiaotong, Ortet, Laura, Ruiz-Bonilla, Vanessa, Flández, Marta, Moiseeva, Victoria, Rebollo, Elena, Jardí, Mercè, Sun, Hong-Wei, Musarò, Antonio, Sandri, Marco, del Sol, Antonio, Sartorelli, Vittorio, Muñoz-Cánoves, Pura
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tissue regeneration declines with ageing but little is known about whether this arises from changes in stem-cell heterogeneity. Here, in homeostatic skeletal muscle, we identify two quiescent stem-cell states distinguished by relative CD34 expression: CD34 High , with stemness properties (genuine state), and CD34 Low , committed to myogenic differentiation (primed state). The genuine-quiescent state is unexpectedly preserved into later life, succumbing only in extreme old age due to the acquisition of primed-state traits. Niche-derived IGF1-dependent Akt activation debilitates the genuine stem-cell state by imposing primed-state features via FoxO inhibition. Interventions to neutralize Akt and promote FoxO activity drive a primed-to-genuine state conversion, whereas FoxO inactivation deteriorates the genuine state at a young age, causing regenerative failure of muscle, as occurs in geriatric mice. These findings reveal transcriptional determinants of stem-cell heterogeneity that resist ageing more than previously anticipated and are only lost in extreme old age, with implications for the repair of geriatric muscle. García-Prat, Perdiguero, Alonso-Martín et al. show that skeletal muscle contains a subpopulation of quiescent stem cells, maintained by FoxO signalling, that is preserved into late life but declines in advanced geriatric age.
ISSN:1465-7392
1476-4679
DOI:10.1038/s41556-020-00593-7