CXCR7 promotes foetal myoblast fusion at muscle fiber tips independently of Myomaker via a ß1integrin-EGFR-dependent mechanism

Archive ouverte

Nassari, Sonya | Blavet, Cédrine | Duprez, Delphine | Fournier-Thibault, Claire

Edité par CCSD -

Abstract Muscle growth must be tightly regulated during development in order to obtain the final muscle shape. Myoblast fusion is a critical step of muscle growth, driving the formation of syncytial myofibers attaching at both ends to tendons. We investigated the role of the CXCR7 chemokine receptor in foetal muscle growth during chicken limb development. We show that CXCR7 displays a regionalized expression at the tips of myofibers close to tendons in foetal limb muscles, which is exclusive to the central location of the fusion gene MYOMAKER ( TMEM8C in chicken) in foetal muscles. CXCR7 promotes myoblast fusion independently of TMEM8C in chicken limb muscles and in foetal myoblast cultures and requires EGF receptor signalling. The CXCR7 ligand, CXCL12, expressed in connective tissue, increases ß1integrin activation at the myotendinous junction and CXCR7 expression at muscle tips, resulting in a fusion promoting effect independent from a direct binding of CXCL12 to CXCR7 receptor. Our results evidence a CXCR7-dependent/TMEM8C-independent fusion mechanism at the myofiber tips that regulates muscle growth at the tendon/muscle interface during foetal myogenesis.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Unexpected contribution of fibroblasts to muscle lineage as a mechanism for limb muscle patterning

Archive ouverte | Esteves de Lima, Joana | CCSD

International audience. Positional information driving limb muscle patterning is contained in connective tissue fibroblasts but not in myogenic cells. Limb muscles originate from somites, while connective tissues or...

The chemokines CXCL12 and CXCL14 differentially regulate connective tissue markers during limb development

Archive ouverte | Nassari, Sonya | CCSD

International audience. Abstract Connective tissues (CT) support and connect organs together. Understanding the formation of CT is important, as CT deregulation leads to fibrosis. The identification of CT specific m...

BMP signalling directs a fibroblast-to-myoblast conversion at the connective tissue/muscle interface to pattern limb muscles

Archive ouverte | de Lima, Joana, Esteves | CCSD

Posté sur BioRxiv le 21 juillet 2020. Positional information driving limb muscle patterning is contained in lateral plate mesoderm-derived tissues, such as tendon or muscle connective tissue but not in myogenic cell...

Chargement des enrichissements...