Abstract

The hypothesis of satellite cell diversity in slow and fast mammalian muscles was tested by examining acetylcholinesterase (AChE) regulation in muscles regenerating 1) under conditions of muscle disuse (tenotomy, leg immobilization) in which the pattern of neural stimulation is changed, and 2) after cross-transplantation when the regenerating muscle develops under a foreign neural stimulation pattern. Soleus (SOL) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles of the rat were allowed to regenerate after ischemic-toxic injury either in their own sites or had been cross-transplanted to the site of the other muscle. Molecular forms of AChE in regenerating muscles were analyzed by velocity sedimentation in linear sucrose gradients. Neither tenotomy nor limb immobilization significantly affected the characteristic pattern of AChE molecular forms in regenerating SOL muscles, suggesting that the neural stimulation pattern is probably not decisive for its induction. During an early phase of regeneration, the general pattern of AChE molecular forms in the cross-transplanted regenerating muscle was predominantly determined by the type of its muscle of origin, and much less by the innervating nerve which exerted only a modest modifying effect. However, alkali-resistant myofibrillar ATPase activity on which the separation of muscle fibers into type I and type II is based, was determined predominantly by the motor nerve innervating the regenerating muscle. Mature regenerated EDL muscles (13 weeks after injury) which had been innervated by the SOL nerve became virtually indistinguishable from the SOL muscles in regard to their pattern of AChE molecular forms. However, AChE patterns of mature regenerated SOL muscles that had been innervated by the EDL nerve still displayed some features of the SOL pattern. In regard to AChE regulation, muscle satellite cells from slow or fast rat muscles convey to their descendant myotubes the information shifting their initial development in the direction of either slow or fast muscle, respectively. The satellite cells in fast or slow muscles are, therefore, intrinsically different. Intrinsic information is expressed mostly during an early phase of regeneration whereas later on the regulatory influence of the motor nerve more or less predominates.

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