Abstract

Skeletal muscle has a remarkable capacity to regenerate by virtue of its resident stem cells (satellite cells). This capacity declines with aging, although whether this is due to extrinsic changes in the environment and/or to cell-intrinsic mechanisms associated to aging has been a matter of intense debate. Furthermore, while some groups support that satellite cell aging is reversible by a youthful environment, others support cell-autonomous irreversible changes, even in the presence of youthful factors. Indeed, whereas the parabiosis paradigm has unveiled the environment as responsible for the satellite cell functional decline, satellite cell transplantation studies support cell-intrinsic deficits with aging. In this review, we try to shed light on the potential causes underlying these discrepancies. We propose that the experimental paradigm used to interrogate intrinsic and extrinsic regulation of stem cell function may be a part of the problem. The assays deployed are not equivalent and may overburden specific cellular regulatory processes and thus probe different aspects of satellite cell properties. Finally, distinct subsets of satellite cells may be under different modes of molecular control and mobilized preferentially in one paradigm than in the other. A better understanding of how satellite cells molecularly adapt during aging and their context-dependent deployment during injury and transplantation will lead to the development of efficacious compensating strategies that maintain stem cell fitness and tissue homeostasis throughout life.

Highlights

  • Stem cells are essential for the maintenance and repair of many adult tissues during normal physiology or in response to damage

  • If the functional deficit of aged satellite cells engrafted into an aged host was twice that observed in a young host, the results from parabiosis, transplantation, and in vitro studies would be in general agreement: that alterations in stem cell function during aging is a product of intrinsic and extrinsic deregulation

  • The results based on satellite cell transplantation appear to be in conflict with those from parabiosis

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Stem cells are essential for the maintenance and repair of many adult tissues during normal physiology or in response to damage. The results from the first study implied that circulating GDF11 levels decline with aging and showed that the treatment of old mice with recombinant GDF11 improved muscle regeneration after injury [33].

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call