Adipogenesis of skeletal muscle fibro/adipogenic progenitors is affected by the WNT5a/GSK3/β-catenin axis.
Alessio ReggioMarco RosinaAlessandro PalmaAndrea Cerquone PerpetuiniLucia Lisa PetrilliCesare GargioliClaudia FuocoElisa MicarelliGiulio GiulianiMauro CerretaniAlberto BrescianiFrancesca SaccoLuisa CastagnoliGianni CesareniPublished in: Cell death and differentiation (2020)
Fibro/Adipogenic Progenitors (FAPs) are muscle-interstitial progenitors mediating pro-myogenic signals that are critical for muscle homeostasis and regeneration. In myopathies, the autocrine/paracrine constraints controlling FAP adipogenesis are released causing fat infiltrates. Here, by combining pharmacological screening, high-dimensional mass cytometry and in silico network modeling with the integration of single-cell/bulk RNA sequencing data, we highlighted the canonical WNT/GSK/β-catenin signaling as a crucial pathway modulating FAP adipogenesis triggered by insulin signaling. Consistently, pharmacological blockade of GSK3, by the LY2090314 inhibitor, stabilizes β-catenin and represses PPARγ expression abrogating FAP adipogenesis ex vivo while limiting fatty degeneration in vivo. Furthermore, GSK3 inhibition improves the FAP pro-myogenic role by efficiently stimulating, via follistatin secretion, muscle satellite cell (MuSC) differentiation into mature myotubes. Combining, publicly available single-cell RNAseq datasets, we characterize FAPs as the main source of WNT ligands inferring their potential in mediating autocrine/paracrine responses in the muscle niche. Lastly, we identify WNT5a, whose expression is impaired in dystrophic FAPs, as a crucial WNT ligand able to restrain the detrimental adipogenic differentiation drift of these cells through the positive modulation of the β-catenin signaling.
Keyphrases
- skeletal muscle
- single cell
- cell proliferation
- rna seq
- stem cells
- pi k akt
- signaling pathway
- insulin resistance
- poor prognosis
- cell cycle arrest
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- high throughput
- high fat diet induced
- induced apoptosis
- type diabetes
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- fatty acid
- glycemic control
- mesenchymal stem cells
- anti inflammatory
- oxidative stress
- bone marrow
- weight loss
- molecular dynamics simulations