Skeletal muscle cells (myofibers) require multiple nuclei to support a cytoplasmic volume that is larger than other mononuclear cell types. It is dogmatic that mammalian resident myonuclei rely on stem cells (specifically satellite cells) for adding new DNA to muscle fibers to facilitate cytoplasmic expansion that occurs during muscle growth. In this review, we discuss the relationship between cell size and supporting genetic material. We present evidence that myonuclei may undergo DNA synthesis as a strategy to increase genetic material in myofibers independent from satellite cells. We then describe the details of our experiments that demonstrated that mammalian myonuclei can replicate DNA in vivo. Finally, we present our findings in the context of expanding knowledge about myonuclear heterogeneity, myonuclear mobility and shape. We also address why myonuclear replication is potentially important and provide future directions for remaining unknowns. Myonuclear DNA replication, coupled with new discoveries about myonuclear transcription, morphology, and behavior in response to stress, may provide opportunities to leverage previously unappreciated skeletal muscle biological processes for therapeutic targets that support muscle mass, function, and plasticity.
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The image depicts an artistic representation of the lift-out and sectioning step with a focused ion beam (FIB), which is referred to as serial lift-out. A block of vitreously frozen biological material (in this case, a single C. elegans L1 larva) is attached (or "welded") to a micromanipulator needle. The underside of the block is then attached to a rectangular mesh copper EM grid, and a section of ~1 µm is cut away from it with the FIB. This procedure is repeated, yielding an array of sections that can be further thinned to ~200 nm for cryo-ET and further structural analysis. Image hand drawn (ink), digitised and coloured with Adobe Fresco (iPad). Read more in 'Cryo-electron tomography: en route to the molecular anatomy of organisms and tissues' by Plitzko and colleagues on pp 2415-2425 of this issue of Biochemical Society Transactions. Image courtesy of JM Plitzko
The expanding roles of myonuclei in adult skeletal muscle health and function
Agnieszka K. Borowik, Kevin A. Murach, Benjamin F. Miller; The expanding roles of myonuclei in adult skeletal muscle health and function. Biochem Soc Trans 19 December 2024; 52 (6): 2603–2616. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BST20241637
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