Originally published as JHC exPRESS on June 9, 2008. doi:10.1369/jhc.2008.951608
Volume 56 (9): 831-840, 2008 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc. Pax7 Shows Higher Satellite Cell Frequencies and Concentrations Within Intrafusal Fibers of Muscle Spindles
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada (LJK,MZA,CNN,HGD,BWCR), and Department of Biological Structure, School of Medicine, University of Washington, 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
Intrafusal fibers within muscle spindles make up a small subpopulation of muscle fibers. These proprioceptive fibers differ from most extrafusal fibers because, even in maturity, their diameters remain small, and they retain expression of developmental myosins. Although both extrafusal and intrafusal fibers contain satellite cells (SCs), comparatively little is known about intrafusal SCs. Analyzing chicken fast-phasic posterior (PLD) and slow-tonic anterior (ALD) latissimus dorsi muscles, we show that SCs of both intrafusal and extrafusal fibers express Pax7. We further test the hypotheses that intrafusal fibers display parameters reflective of extrafusal immaturity. These hypotheses are that intrafusal fibers contain (a) higher SC frequencies (number of SC nuclei/all nuclei within basal lamina) and concentrations (closer together) and (b) smaller myonuclear domains than do adjacent extrafusal fibers. IHC techniques were applied to PLD and ALD muscles excised at 30 and 138 days posthatch. The hypotheses were validated, suggesting that intrafusal fibers have greater capacities for growth, regeneration, and repair than do adjacent extrafusal fibers. During maturation, extrafusal and intrafusal fibers show similar trends of decreasing SC frequencies and concentrations and increases in myonuclear domains. Thus, extrafusal and intrafusal fibers alike should exhibit reduced capacities for growth, regeneration, and repair during maturation. (J Histochem Cytochem 56:831–840, 2008)
Key Words: muscle spindles intrafusal extrafusal Pax7 satellite cells myonuclear domain anterior latissimus dorsi posterior latissimus dorsi
MUSCLE SPINDLES are minute mechanoreceptors located in variable numbers within the bellies of skeletal muscles (Maier 1992
Satellite cells (SCs), mononuclear stem cells located between the plasmalemma and basal lamina of skeletal muscle fibers (Mauro 1961
Myonuclear domain is the calculated volume of cytoplasm per myonucleus (Hall and Ralston 1989
The tapered ends of extrafusal fibers also maintain a comparatively immature state. The expression of a developmental myosin is retained within the fiber ends of mature chicken pectoralis muscle (Rosser et al. 2000
Because both intrafusal fibers and the tapered ends of extrafusal fibers persist in comparatively immature states, we postulate that they might share similarities in characteristics related to fiber growth and maturation. Thus, this study tests the hypotheses that intrafusal fibers will contain (a) higher SC frequencies and concentrations and (b) smaller myonuclear domains than the adjacent extrafusals. IHC techniques were used to quantify SC and myonuclear numbers of both intrafusal and extrafusal fibers of the anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) and posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscles of chickens 30 and 138 days posthatch. These muscles are, respectively, well-characterized synergistic slow and fast contracting muscles in which intrafusal fiber distribution has been mapped (Ovalle et al. 1999
Experimental Model White Leghorn chickens (Gallus gallus; Hy-Line W-36, Clark Hy-Line, Brandon, Canada) were hatched 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
The ALD and PLD are more formally termed latissimus dorsi pars cranialis and latissimus dorsi pars caudalis (Vanden Berge and Zweers 1993
Tissue Preparation and Sectioning
IHC Alexa Fluor 488 goat anti-mouse IgG (A-11001; Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) was used to label anti-Pax7 and NA4 green and Alexa Fluor 546 goat anti-rabbit IgG (A-11010; Invitrogen) to label anti-laminin red when viewed with epifluorescent microscopy. The secondary labeling solution, containing both secondary antibodies each diluted 1:200 in PBS at pH 7.2, was applied to each slide for 30 min at room temperature in the dark. Hoechst 33258 (bisbenzimide; Sigma Chemical) was applied to each slide for 5 min at a dilution of 1:1,500,000 in PBS to label the DNA in nuclei blue under epifluorescent microscopy. Finally, 4% formaldehyde in PBS was applied to each slide for 3 min. Slides were mounted in Geltol (Thermo Scientific; Pittsburgh, PA) and stored at 4C in the dark.
Imaging and Analyses The mean lengths of myonuclei and SCs were determined by sectioning tissue longitudinally at 12 µm thickness with a –20C cryostat. Three chickens at each age were used to measure the lengths of 50 myonuclei and 50 SC nuclei per muscle studied. Longitudinal sections were labeled according to the preceding protocol, omitting primary solution B. Scion Image 1.63 was used to measure the lengths of myonuclei and SC nuclei.
Calculations and Statistics
ALD and PLD muscles from five animals at each posthatch age of 30 and 138 days were studied. Data throughout this report are presented as means and SEs. The mean SC frequency, mean surface area of plasmalemma per SC, and mean myonuclear domain were each analyzed for differences between type of fiber (intrafusal vs extrafusal fibers), muscle type (ALD vs PLD), and age (30 vs 138 days posthatch). Comparisons were performed using a one-way ANOVA test at 5% level of significance (p
The ALD and PLD each underwent an 6- to 7-fold increase in wet weight from 30 to 138 days posthatch (Table 1
). The mean lengths of myonuclei and satellite cell nuclei did not change with age in either the ALD or PLD (Table 1). Thus, for the calculations outlined in the Materials and Methods section, data were pooled such that the average lengths of ALD myonuclei and SC nuclei were 10.89 ± 0.02 and 9.84 ± 0.04 µm, respectively. PLD myonuclei and SC nuclei lengths used were 11.57 ± 0.09 and 10.34 ± 0.06 µm, respectively.
Laminin is a major constituent of the basement membrane in a variety of cell types including endothelium, nerve, and muscle (Tzu and Marinkovich 2008
The mean frequency of SCs (Figure 3A) was significantly higher in intrafusal than extrafusal fibers in all muscles examined; in ALD at 30 (p<0.001) and 138 days (p<0.001) and in PLD at 30 (p=0.008) and 138 days (p=0.008). In 30-day ALD, mean SC frequency in intrafusal and extrafusal fibers ranged, respectively, from 32.9% to 38.7% and from 15.6% to 19.4%. In 138-day ALD, it ranged from 24.1% to 25.0% in intrafusal and from 11.1% to 13.9% in extrafusal fibers. In 30-day PLD, it extended from 20.0% to 25.0% in intrafusal and from 5.0% to 6.6% in extrafusal fibers. In 138-day PLD, values in intrafusal and extrafusal fibers ranged, respectively, from 15.4% to 19.2% and from 4.8% to 5.1%. Mean SC frequency decreased significantly from 30 to 138 days posthatch in ALD intrafusal (p=0.008) and extrafusal fibers (p<0.001) and in PLD intrafusal (p=0.003) and extrafusal fibers (p=0.032). In comparing the two muscles, mean SC frequency was always significantly greater in the ALD than PLD; in intrafusal fibers at 30 (p<0.001) and 138 days (p=0.008) and in extrafusal fibers at 30 (p<0.001) and 138 days (p=0.008).
Mean surface area per SC (Figure 3B) was significantly lower in intrafusal than extrafusal fibers in all muscles studied: in ALD at 30 (p=0.008) and 138 days (p=0.008) and in PLD at 30 (p=0.008) and 138 days (p=0.008). In 30-day ALD, mean surface area per SC in intrafusal and extrafusal fibers ranged, respectively, from 806 to 961 and 3900 to 4716 µm2. Within 138-day ALD, it ranged from 1554 to 1694 µm2 in intrafusal fibers and from 4004 to 4790 µm2 in extrafusal fibers. In 30-day PLD, it extended from 1435 to 1686 µm2 in intrafusal fibers and from 14,264 to 17,045 µm2 in extrafusal fibers. The 138-day PLD ranged from 2560 to 3151 µm2 in intrafusal fibers and from 17,396 to 19,547 µm2 in extrafusal fibers. Mean surface area per SC increased significantly from 30 to 138 days posthatch in ALD intrafusal (p<0.001), PLD intrafusal (p=0.008), and PLD extrafusal (p=0.008) fibers. However, the apparent numeric increase in surface area per SC with age in ALD extrafusal fibers was not significant (p=0.770). Contrasting the two muscles, mean surface area per SC was consistently lower in the ALD than PLD: in intrafusal fibers at 30 (p
Myonuclear domain (volume of cytoplasm per myonucleus; Figure 3C) was always significantly smaller in intrafusal than extrafusal fibers: in 30-day ALD (p=0.008), 138-day ALD (p=0.008), 30-day PLD (p
It has long been known that intrafusal fibers contain SCs, but very little progress has been made in their characterization. We found that Pax7 is expressed within SC nuclei of both intrafusal and extrafusal muscle fibers. As outlined in our studies of chicken pectoralis extrafusal fibers (Halevy et al. 2004
This study provided new observations and insights about muscle spindles. Regardless of muscle or age studied, intrafusal fibers had higher frequencies and concentrations of SCs and smaller myonuclear domains than the surrounding extrafusal fibers. The values obtained for each of these three parameters quantified are indicative of greater capacities for growth, regeneration, and repair (Rosser et al. 2002
The comparatively immature state of intrafusal fibers may certainly be related to their relatively higher frequencies and concentrations of SCs and smaller myonuclear domains. Immature fibers are smaller in diameter than mature fibers (Rosser et al. 2000
The higher activity levels of intrafusal fibers can also be correlated with higher SC numbers and smaller myonuclear domains. In general, greater contractile activity of a muscle corresponds with higher SC frequencies (Gibson and Schultz 1982
The extrafusal fibers of the ALD have a greater frequency and concentration of SCs and smaller myonuclear domains than the extrafusal fibers of the PLD. Slower contracting extrafusal fibers are typically activated more frequently than fast contracting fibers (Anapol and Herring 2000
Similarities between intrafusal and extrafusal fibers in the trends of posthatch SC numbers and myonuclear domain size can be used to formulate additional theories. The decrease in SC numbers associated with maturation of extrafusal fibers has been related to a diminished capacity for growth, regeneration, and repair (Shefer et al. 2006 In summary, Pax7 can be used to label SCs in both extrafusal and intrafusal fibers of the chicken. Greater SC frequencies and concentrations and smaller myonuclear domain sizes within intrafusal fibers suggest that they have a greater capacity for growth, regeneration, and repair than the adjacent extrafusal fibers. These results also imply that intrafusal fibers are less developmentally mature and/or more physiologically active than extrafusal fibers. Similarities in developmental trends between intrafusal and extrafusal fibers in decreasing SC numbers and increasing myonuclear domain sizes indicate that, as they mature, intrafusal fibers will, like extrafusal fibers, show a diminished capacity for growth, regeneration, and repair. Studies further exploring these concepts could involve experimental paradigms that stress muscles to stimulate SC division, works labeling markers of SC differentiation and proliferation, and physiologic models comparing the contractile activities of intrafusal and extrafusal fibers within the same muscle preparations.
A Discovery Grant awarded to B.W.C.R. from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada provided funds for this study. Two Undergraduate Student Research Awards and an Alexander Graham Bell Canada Graduate Scholarship from NSERC funded L.J.K. A Summer Student Research Project from the College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, funded C.N.N. The Jordan University of Science and Technology and the College of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, provided funds for M.Z.A. Z.Y.R. is supported by the National Institute on Aging (AG021566 and AG013798) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (NRI, 2003-35206-12843). Lesley A. McLeod of the Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, University of Saskatchewan, provided assistance with statistical analyses. Dr. Everett Bandman at the University of California, Department of Food Sciences and Technology, generously provided the anti-myosin antibody. The 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 and maintained by The University of Iowa, Department of Biological Sciences, Iowa City, IA.
Received for publication April 8, 2008; accepted May 16, 2008
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