Abstract

Satellite cells are multipotential stem cells that mediate postnatal muscle growth and respond differently to temperature based upon aerobic versus anaerobic fiber-type origin. The objective of this study was to determine how temperatures below and above the control, 38°C, affect the fate of satellite cells isolated from the anaerobic pectoralis major (p. major) or mixed fiber biceps femoris (b. femoris). At all sampling times, p. major and b. femoris cells accumulated less lipid when incubated at low temperatures and more lipid at elevated temperatures compared to the control. Satellite cells isolated from the p. major were more sensitive to temperature as they accumulated more lipid at elevated temperatures compared to b. femoris cells. Expression of adipogenic genes, CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein β (C/EBPβ) and proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) were different within satellite cells isolated from the p. major or b. femoris. At 72 h of proliferation, C/EBPβ expression increased with increasing temperature in both cell types, while PPARγ expression decreased with increasing temperature in p. major satellite cells. At 48 h of differentiation, both C/EBPβ and PPARγ expression increased in the p. major and decreased in the b. femoris, with increasing temperature. Flow cytometry measured apoptotic markers for early apoptosis (Annexin-V-PE) or late apoptosis (7-AAD), showing less than 1% of apoptotic satellite cells throughout all experimental conditions, therefore, apoptosis was considered biologically not significant. The results support that anaerobic p. major satellite cells are more predisposed to adipogenic conversion than aerobic b. femoris cells when thermally challenged.

Highlights

  • There are four types of muscle fibers: type I slow-twitch oxidative aerobic, type IIB fast-twitch glycolytic anaerobic, and intermediate types IIA and IIX (Quiroz-Rothe and Rivero 2004; Lee et al 2010)

  • At 48 h of differentiation, p. major satellite cells accumulated less lipid (P < 0.001) at 35, 37, and 38°C compared to b. femoris cells (Fig. 2B)

  • Due to the stem cell nature of myogenic satellite cells, they are capable of differentiating into alternate cellular lineages, including adipogenic and osteogenic cell types (Asakura et al 2001; Shefer et al 2004)

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Summary

Introduction

There are four types of muscle fibers: type I slow-twitch oxidative aerobic, type IIB fast-twitch glycolytic anaerobic, and intermediate types IIA and IIX (Quiroz-Rothe and Rivero 2004; Lee et al 2010). Slow-twitch fibers comprise aerobic muscle that generates energy through oxidative breakdown of glucose within cellular mitochondria (Lee et al 2010; Westerblad et al 2010; Velleman and McFarland 2014). Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of the American Physiological Society and The Physiological Society

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