PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

Muscle-bound primordial stem cells give rise to myofiber-associated myogenic and non-myogenic progenitors.

  • Elad Segev,
  • Gabi Shefer,
  • Rivka Adar,
  • Noa Chapal-Ilani,
  • Shalev Itzkovitz,
  • Inna Horovitz,
  • Yitzhak Reizel,
  • Dafna Benayahu,
  • Ehud Shapiro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025605
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 10
p. e25605

Abstract

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Myofiber cultures give rise to myogenic as well as to non-myogenic cells. Whether these myofiber-associated non-myogenic cells develop from resident stem cells that possess mesenchymal plasticity or from other stem cells such as mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) remain unsolved. To address this question, we applied a method for reconstructing cell lineage trees from somatic mutations to MSCs and myogenic and non-myogenic cells from individual myofibers that were cultured at clonal density.Our analyses show that (i) in addition to myogenic progenitors, myofibers also harbor non-myogenic progenitors of a distinct, yet close, lineage; (ii) myofiber-associated non-myogenic and myogenic cells share the same muscle-bound primordial stem cells of a lineage distinct from bone marrow MSCs; (iii) these muscle-bound primordial stem-cells first part to individual muscles and then differentiate into myogenic and non-myogenic stem cells.