Regenerating human skeletal muscle forms an emerging niche in vivo to support PAX7 cells

Author:

Hicks Michael R.ORCID,Saleh Kholoud K.,Clock BenORCID,Gibbs Devin E.,Yang Mandee,Younesi Shahab,Gane Lily,Gutierrez-Garcia Victor,Xi Haibin,Pyle April D.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractSkeletal muscle stem and progenitor cells including those derived from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) offer an avenue towards personalized therapies and readily fuse to form human–mouse myofibres in vivo. However, skeletal muscle progenitor cells (SMPCs) inefficiently colonize chimeric stem cell niches and instead associate with human myofibres resembling foetal niches. We hypothesized competition with mouse satellite cells (SCs) prevented SMPC engraftment into the SC niche and thus generated an SC ablation mouse compatible with human engraftment. Single-nucleus RNA sequencing of SC-ablated mice identified the absence of a transient myofibre subtype during regeneration expressing Actc1. Similarly, ACTC1+ human myofibres supporting PAX7+ SMPCs increased in SC-ablated mice, and after re-injury we found SMPCs could now repopulate into chimeric niches. To demonstrate ACTC1+ myofibres are essential to supporting PAX7 SMPCs, we generated caspase-inducible ACTC1 depletion human pluripotent stem cells, and upon SMPC engraftment we found a 90% reduction in ACTC1+ myofibres and a 100-fold decrease in PAX7 cell numbers compared with non-induced controls. We used spatial RNA sequencing to identify key factors driving emerging human niche formation between ACTC1+ myofibres and PAX7+ SMPCs in vivo. This revealed that transient regenerating human myofibres are essential for emerging niche formation in vivo to support PAX7 SMPCs.

Funder

California Institute for Regenerative Medicine

Muscular Dystrophy Association

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Qatar Foundation

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cell Biology

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