Home
Scholarly Works
Myoblast paracrine factors induce catabolic...
Journal article

Myoblast paracrine factors induce catabolic remodelling in electrically stimulated myotubes

Abstract

Skeletal muscle plasticity is strongly influenced by a multitude of cell populations within the muscle niche. Satellite cells, or resident muscle stem cells, play an essential role in skeletal muscle remodelling after injury where they differentiate into myoblasts and directly donate myonuclei to damaged fibres thereby promoting protein synthesis. Satellite cells have also been shown to act in a paracrine fashion to influence the infiltration of immune cells and other cell types into the skeletal muscle environment to advance regeneration. However, in many degenerative muscular conditions, satellite cell activity is impaired. Moreover, their paracrine mediated signalling directly to muscle fibres remains poorly understood, highlighting a promising therapeutic target for addressing satellite cell dysfunction. The purpose of this project was two-fold: (1) develop an in vitro model of myoblast (MBL) intercellular communication following myotube damage and (2) to determine if MBL proximity alone is adequate for improving tissue repair and reducing cellular stress during recovery. C2C12-derived myotubes were exposed to 1 h of electrical pulse stimulation (EPS). Immediately following EPS, porous cell inserts containing either myoblasts (MBL+) or no cells (MBL–) were introduced to the damaged myotubes. We employed quantitative protein, mRNA, and morphological analyses of myotubes to characterize the phenotypic response to myoblast signalling. EPS produced Z line sarcomeric disorganization and creatine kinase release from the myotubes, which was mitigated in the MBL + groups (p < 0.05). A significant main effect of MBL exposure was observed in molecular indicators of muscle repair and metabolism; MBL + myotubes had greater hspa1a gene expression, calpain 3 protein and gene expression, BNIP3 and t-ULK protein expression as compared to MBL– myotubes when recovering from EPS (p < 0.05). Myotube diameter decreased significantly in MBL + myotubes post-EPS (p < 0.05). Myoblasts participate in intercellular crosstalk directly to damaged myotubes, and this signalling may increase catabolic processes through the upregulation of contraction-mediated protease activity and autophagic protein content. This research is the first to identify an early, non-fusogenic response mechanism of muscle-resident myoblasts to skeletal muscle in response to damaging stimuli.

Authors

Lesinski MA; Kamal MJ; Parise G

Journal

Scientific Reports, Vol. 15, No. 1,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

December 1, 2025

DOI

10.1038/s41598-025-21126-y

ISSN

2045-2322

Contact the Experts team