Originally published as JHC exPRESS on October 15, 2007. doi:10.1369/jhc.7A7301.2007
Volume 56 (1): 77-87, 2008 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc. Pax7 Reveals a Greater Frequency and Concentration of Satellite Cells at the Ends of Growing Skeletal Muscle Fibers
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada (MZA,BWCR), and Department of Biological Structure and Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington (ZY-R) Correspondence to: Benjamin W.C. Rosser, PhD, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, 107 Wiggins Road, Health Science Building, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5E5, Canada. E-mail: ben.rosser{at}usask.ca
The main sites of longitudinal growth in skeletal muscle are the ends of the fibers. This study tests the hypothesis that satellite cells (SCs) are at a greater frequency (#SC nuclei/all nuclei within basal laminae) and concentration (closer together) within growing fiber ends of posthatch chicken pectoralis. SCs were localized by their Pax7 expression, and fiber ends were identified by their retention of neonatal myosin heavy chains and small cross-sectional profiles. Whereas SC frequency decreased from about 20% at 9 days posthatch to <5% at 115 days, fiber ends retained a frequency of 16%. Calculated mean area of sarcolemma per SC revealed higher concentrations of SCs at fiber ends. There was also a strong inverse correlation between SC frequency and fiber profile cross-sectional size throughout development. This study suggests that SCs at fiber ends play a key role in the longitudinal growth of muscle fibers, and that fiber profile size may impact SC distribution. (J Histochem Cytochem 56:77–87, 2008)
Key Words: muscle fibers muscle growth myosin satellite cells myonuclei Pax7 fiber ends
SATELLITE CELLS (SCs) are mononuclear myogenic stem cells located between the basal lamina and plasmalemma of the skeletal muscle fiber (Mauro 1961
The ends of skeletal muscle fibers have been shown to be highly active sites of postnatal growth and the main sites for the longitudinal growth of muscle. New sarcomeres are added in series to the ends of existing myofibrils during normal longitudinal growth of the muscles of mammals (Williams and Goldspink 1971
The pectoralis muscle of the chicken is composed of overlapping fibers arranged in series (Gaunt and Gans 1992
Questions remain concerning the distribution of SCs within skeletal muscles. SCs tend to be more concentrated near specific anatomic structures such as blood capillaries and motor end plates (Schultz and McCormick 1994
This article elucidates temporal and spatial patterns of SC distribution in the posthatch chicken pectoralis. We test the hypothesis that there is a greater frequency and concentration of SCs at the ends of growing posthatch muscle fibers. We examine some of the same chicken pectoralis samples used in our previous studies (Rosser et al. 2000
Animals and Tissue Preparation Female White Leghorn chickens (Gallus gallus; Hy-Line W-36, Clark Hy-Line, Brandon, Canada) were hatched at the same time and raised under identical conditions at the University of Saskatchewan, Department of Animal and Poultry Science, as described in our previous studies (Rosser et al. 2000
Muscle samples were excised from superficial regions of the cranial half of the main part of the left pectoralis muscle (M. pectoralis pars sternobrachialis; Vanden Berge and Zweers 1993
Antibodies, Nuclear Labeling, and Immunocytochemical Techniques Serial numbered slides of muscle cross-sections were removed from the freezer and air dried for 15 min. Sections were treated for 30 min with blocking solution, which consisted of 5 mM EDTA in PBS (0.02 M sodium phosphate buffer, 0.15 M sodium chloride, pH 7.2), 5% goat serum, and 1% BSA. Slides were then alternatively treated either with the anti-neonatal MyHC antibody for brightfield microscopy or with anti-Pax7, anti-laminin, and Hoechst for epifluorescent microscopy. Using this approach, the type of fiber profile (neonatal, transforming, or adult) can be identified on one slide, whereas SC nuclei and myonuclei within the same fiber can be located in the serial sections on the adjacent slide. Appropriate controls included slides with blocking solution in place of primary antibody.
Anti-neonatal MyHC was applied over sections for 70 min and biotinylated goat anti-mouse secondary antibody for 30 min. The related immunocytochemical protocol followed our earlier studies (Rosser et al. 2000
Anti-Pax7 and anti-laminin primary antibodies were placed together over the serial sections for 12–16 hr at 4C in the dark, and a cocktail containing the fluorescein and tetramethyl secondary antibodies was then applied at room temperature for 30 min. Hoechst was used for 5 min. Slides were then fixed with 4% formaldehyde in PBS and mounted in Geltol (Thermo Shandon; Pittsburgh, PA). The related methodology followed our previous work (Halevy et al. 2004
Image Analysis and Data Collection
Images of the anti-neonatal MyHC antibody-labeled slides were taken using brightfield microscopy from sections serial to those used for epifluorescence and included the same fields of view that were photographed under epifluorescence (Figure 1). Scion imaging program (developed by the U.S. National Institutes of Health and available on the internet by anonymous FTP from Zippy.nimh.nih.gov) was then used to set the images to gray scale for measuring the optical density (OD) and the ellipse minor axis of individual fibers. Pectoralis tissue from 9-day-old chicks was used as a neonatal density control, and larger fiber profiles of pectoralis tissue from 115-day-old chickens were used as a control for the absence of neonatal myosin. OD and ellipse minor axis of at least 200 contiguous fiber profiles from each animal were measured. OD measurements were used to classify fiber profiles as neonatal, transforming, or adult as per our earlier works (Rosser et al. 2000 80 and 110 were classified as transforming. Ellipse minor axis was used to assess the size of fiber cross-sectional profiles from the pectoralis of birds aged 9, 49, and 62 days. These fiber profiles were then arranged into groups according to size by 10-µm increments.
The numbers of satellite cell nuclei (SCN) and myonuclei (MN) within each of the 200+ fibers of each animal were totaled. The frequency of SCs was then calculated for each animal, for each fiber profile type, and for each fiber size range group using the formula that frequency = (SCN/SCN + MN) x 100% (Schmalbruch and Hellhammer 1977 Longitudinal sections were used to measure the lengths of SC nuclei. The same methods outlined in the preceding to study cross-sections using epifluorescent microscopy were utilized to study longitudinal sections. The lengths of 15–22 SC nuclei were measured from longitudinal sections of the pectoralis of each of three animals at each of the following ages: 9, 30, 49, 62, and 115 days.
Concentration of SCs was determined by calculating the mean area of sarcolemma per SC. First, the number of SCs per unit length of fiber was calculated for each type of fiber profile (neonatal, transforming, and adult) using a formula from Castillo de Maruenda and Franzini-Armstrong (1978)
Statistics
Expression of Pax7 by SC Nuclei Locations of Pax7-labeled (+) nuclei relative to basal laminae (Figure 1) were determined from three animals at each of four different developmental ages: 9, 49, 62, and 115 days posthatch (Table 1 ). We found that 97–98% of the Pax7+ nuclei were located beneath the basal laminae of the muscle fibers. Consequently, these nuclei were classified as SC nuclei. The remaining 2–3% were nuclei located outside the basal laminae in the surrounding endomysium and perimysium (Figure 2
).
Length of SC Nuclei Mean length of SC nuclei was determined on longitudinal sections obtained from three animals at each of the following ages: 9, 30, 49, 62, and 115 days posthatch (Table 2 ). There were no significant (p>0.05) differences in the mean length of SC nuclei either within or among these ages. Thus, there is a uniform length for SC nuclei in chicken pectoralis during development. Overall mean length was 10.28 µm ± 0.10 (±SD), and this value was used in our calculations of the number of SCs per unit length of fiber (see Materials and Methods). This length is comparable to those found in previous studies of other species and muscles (Muir 1970
Frequency of SCs and Fiber Size With Age The mean frequency of SCs decreased significantly (p<0.01) with age. As illustrated in Figure 3A , the mean frequency declined from 20.04% at age 9 days posthatch to 4.86% at 115 days. These findings were consistent with our previous results, which included two of the same data points (Halevy et al. 2004
Frequency of SCs With Type of Fiber Profile OD measurements were used to classify fiber profiles as neonatal, transforming, or adult as per our earlier works (Rosser et al. 2000
Surface Area of Sarcolemma per SC The surface area of muscle fiber sarcolemma per SC was calculated for each different type of fiber profile at each of the following ages: 9, 23, 30, 49, 62, 79, and 115 days posthatch. There was less area of sarcolemma per SC in neonatal profiles than in other profiles (Figure 4B). The difference was statistically significant (p<0.05) between neonatal and either transforming or adult profiles, but not between transforming and adult profiles (p=0.38). These results show that there is a greater concentration of SCs at fiber ends, represented by neonatal profiles, than in other regions of the muscle fibers.
Frequency of SCs With Fiber Profile Size
It is now well established that in skeletal muscle the nuclei of all resident satellite cells express Pax7 (Seale et al. 2000 97–98% of Pax7+ nuclei are localized in positions characteristic of SCs, immediately beneath the basal laminae of muscle fibers. Hence, it is inferred that these Pax7+ nuclei are SC nuclei. The remaining 2–3% Pax7+ nuclei were located in the interstitial spaces outside the basal laminae of the muscle fibers and were not included in our calculations of SCs along fiber lengths. We also found at all ages of posthatch growth that myonuclei (Pax7–) were located throughout the sarcoplasm of individual fibers. Whereas the peripheral location of myonuclei is characteristic of normal postnatal mammalian muscle fibers (Sewry and Dubowitz 2001
This is the first study to demonstrate that throughout growth and maturation there is both a greater frequency and a higher concentration of SCs at the terminal tips of skeletal muscle fibers. Our earlier studies showed that the ends of maturing skeletal muscle fibers in the posthatch pectoralis of the chicken (Rosser et al. 2000
Our results suggest that SCs at fiber ends play a key role in the longitudinal growth of muscle fibers. Developing skeletal muscle fibers grow in both length and width (Zhang and McLennan 1995
A recent study using immunocytochemical techniques to study rat soleus muscle indicated that equal numbers of SCs were distributed per unit length along the fibers (Wang et al. 2006
We found that 2–3% of the Pax7+ nuclei were located in the interstitial spaces outside the basal laminae of the muscle fibers. Neither the role nor the source of myogenic cells in the interstitium is fully understood (Kuang et al. 2006
We demonstrate a strong inverse correlation between fiber profile diameter and SC frequency throughout development. To the best of our knowledge, this correlation has not been demonstrated by any other researcher(s). Another parameter showing strong inverse correlations with fiber cross-sectional size is oxidative capacity, as revealed by quantitative biochemical or microdensitometric analyses of mammalian muscle fibers (Rosser et al. 1992
Further study is required to address questions arising from our findings. Are a greater proportion of SCs active at the ends than elsewhere along the fibers? To ascertain this, active SCs could be identified by immunolabeling with antibodies against antigens associated with SC proliferation such as proliferating cell nuclear antigen or the myogenic regulatory factor MyoD, or by experimentally introducing bromodeoxyuridine to the live animals to label DNA of proliferating cells (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1994
The College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan and the Jordan University of Science and Technology provided funds for M.Z.A. Z.Y.R is supported by the National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health (Grants AG-021566 and AG-013798) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service (NRI, 2003-35206-12843). A Discovery Grant awarded to B.W.C.R. from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada provided funds for this study. We thank Dr. Everett Bandman of the Department of Food Sciences and Technology, University of California, for the generous gift of the anti-neonatal MyHC antibody. Antibody against Pax7 developed by A. Kawakami was obtained from the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank developed under the auspices of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) and maintained by the Department of Biological Sciences, University of Iowa. Tonya McGowan, University of Saskatchewan, assisted with preparation of the final version of the figures.
Received for publication July 2, 2007; accepted September 20, 2007
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