Publication | Closed Access
Essential environmental cues from the satellite cell niche: optimizing proliferation and differentiation
131
Citations
32
References
2009
Year
Tissue EngineeringEnvironmental SignalingEngineeringSatellite Cell NichePassage 0Cell CultureCell ProliferationBiomedical EngineeringCell GrowthCell SpecializationCellular PhysiologyEnvironmental BiologyEssential Environmental CuesRegenerative MedicineSkeletal MuscleOptimizing ProliferationMatrix BiologyMechanobiologyCell DivisionMurine MpcsMorphogenesisCell BiomechanicsMuscle Progenitor CellsFunctional Tissue EngineeringCell EngineeringCell BiologyBiologyDevelopmental BiologyTissue CultureCell Fate DeterminationMedicineExtracellular Matrix
The use of muscle progenitor cells (MPCs) for regenerative medicine has been severely compromised by their decreased proliferative and differentiative capacity after being cultured in vitro. We hypothesized the loss of pivotal niche factors to be the cause. Therefore, we investigated the proliferative and differentiative response of passage 0 murine MPCs to varying substrate elasticities and protein coatings and found that proliferation was influenced only by elasticity, whereas differentiation was influenced by both elasticity and protein coating. A stiffness of 21 kPa optimally increased the proliferation of MPCs. Regarding differentiation, we demonstrated that fusion of MPCs into myotubes takes place regardless of elasticity. However, ongoing maturation with cross-striations and contractions occurred only on elasticities higher than 3 kPa. Furthermore, maturation was fastest on poly-d-lysine and laminin coatings.
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