Scientists Identify Muscle-Forming Cells

Dentistry Today

0 Shares

When reading through the scientific literature, it’s easy to encounter the long, anatomically descriptive names of adult stem cells. These include tongue twisters such as bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells and multipotent adult progenitor cells. And yet, as official as these names sound, they remain only partial addresses. Missing are the next lines of information that contain the descriptive molecular markers that would allow scientists to identify the cells prospectively and, like a street address, indicate where they reside in their tissues of origin. The reason is that scientists who are in search of adult stem cells now generally first extract tissue from a predetermined place in the body, culture the various cells in the sample, and retrospectively identify the colonies of adult progenitor cells that appear. However, in the September 2007 issue of the journal Nature Biotechnology, a National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) grantee and colleagues reported for the first time that they have prospectively identified myogenic, or muscle-forming, endothelial cells in human skeletal muscle. The cells, which coexpress myogenic and endothelial protein markers, differentiated into muscle, bone, or cartilage-forming cell lineages. Another very important finding of these scientists was that they could use these cells to regenerate muscle fibers in mice that had skeletal muscle injuries. The cells also proved to be quite amenable to biotechnological processing. As the scientists concluded, “These properties [ease of biotechnological processing], together with their high muscle-regeneration ability, suggest that such autologous progenitors could be envisioned as a therapy for muscle diseases.”


(NIDCR, Science News in Brief, November 26, 2007)