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  4. Efficient transdifferentiation of human dermal fibroblasts into skeletal muscle
 
research article

Efficient transdifferentiation of human dermal fibroblasts into skeletal muscle

Boularaoui, Selwa Mokhtar
•
Abdel-Raouf, Khaled M. A.
•
Alwahab, Noaf Salah Ali  
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February 1, 2018
Journal Of Tissue Engineering And Regenerative Medicine

Skeletal muscle holds significant regenerative potential but is incapable of restoring tissue loss caused by severe injury, congenital defects or tumour ablation. Consequently, skeletal muscle models are being developed to study human pathophysiology and regeneration. Their physiological accuracy, however, is hampered by the lack of an easily accessible human cell source that is readily expandable and capable of efficient differentiation. MYOD1, a master gene regulator, induces transdifferentiation of a variety of cell types into skeletal muscle, although inefficiently in human cells. Here we used MYOD1 to establish its capacity to induce skeletal muscle transdifferentiation of human dermal fibroblasts under baseline conditions. We found significant transdifferentiation improvement via transforming growth factor-/activin signalling inhibition, canonical WNT signalling activation, receptor tyrosine kinase binding and collagen type I utilization. Mechanistically, manipulation of individual signalling pathways modulated the transdifferentiation process via myoblast proliferation, lowering the transdifferentiation threshold and inducing cell fusion. Overall, we used transdifferentiation to achieve the robust derivation of human skeletal myotubes and have described the signalling pathways and mechanisms regulating this process. Copyright (c) 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/term.2568
Web of Science ID

WOS:000425184900024

Author(s)
Boularaoui, Selwa Mokhtar
Abdel-Raouf, Khaled M. A.
Alwahab, Noaf Salah Ali  
Kondash, Megan E.
Truskey, George A.
Teo, Jeremy Choon Meng
Christoforou, Nicolas
Date Issued

2018-02-01

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Journal Of Tissue Engineering And Regenerative Medicine
Volume

12

Issue

2

Start page

E918

End page

E936

Subjects

Cell & Tissue Engineering

•

Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology

•

Cell Biology

•

Engineering, Biomedical

•

Engineering

•

skeletal muscle

•

transdifferentiation

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extracellular matrix

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collagen type i

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tgf

•

activin

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wnt

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receptor tyrosine kinase

•

in-vitro

•

myogenic differentiation

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stem-cells

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satellite cells

•

tissue

•

expression

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myoblasts

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growth

•

inhibition

•

culture

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LSBI  
Available on Infoscience
December 13, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/152427
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