Contribution of Retinoid X Receptor Signaling to the Specification of Skeletal Muscle Lineage
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Abstract
Pluripotent stem cells possess a tremendous potential for the
treatment of many diseases because of their capacity to differentiate
into a variety of cell lineages. However, they provide little
promise for muscle-related diseases, mainly because of the lack
of small molecule inducers to efficiently direct myogenic conversion.
Retinoic acid, acting through the retinoic acid receptor
(RAR) and retinoid X receptor (RXR), affects stem cell fate
determination in a concentration-dependent manner, but it
only has a modest efficacy on the commitment of ES cells into
skeletal muscle lineage. The RXR is very important for embryonic
development but is generally considered to act as a silent
partner of RAR in a non-permissive mode. In this study, we have
examined whether activation of the RXR by rexinoid or RXRspecific
signaling play a role in the specification of stem cells
into muscle lineage. Our findings demonstrate that mouse ES
cells generate skeletal myocytes effectively upon treatment
with rexinoid at the early stage of differentiation and that on
a molecular level, rexinoid-enhanced myogenesis simulates
the sequential events observed in vivo. Moreover, RXR-mediated
myogenic conversion requires the function of -catenin
but not RAR. Our studies establish the feasibility of applying
the RXR agonist in cell-based therapies to treat muscle-related
diseases. The aptitude of mouse ES cells to generate
skeletal myocytes following rexinoid induction also provides
a model system to study the convergence of different signaling
pathways in myogenesis.
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Keywords
Pluripotent stem cells, Retinoic acid receptor, RAR, Retinoid X receptor, RXR, Muscle lineage, Skeletal muscle development
