نتایج جستجو برای: muscle regeneration

تعداد نتایج: 384188  

Journal: :Journal of cell science 2006
Toshifumi Yokota Qi-Long Lu Jennifer E Morgan Kay E Davies Rosie Fisher Shin'ichi Takeda Terence A Partridge

Duchenne muscular dystrophy and the mdx mouse myopathies reflect a lack of dystrophin in muscles. However, both contain sporadic clusters of revertant fibers (RFs) that express dystrophin. RF clusters expand in size with age in mdx mice. To test the hypothesis that the expansion of clusters is achieved through the process of muscle degeneration and regeneration, we analyzed muscles of mdx mice ...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology 2005
James G Tidball

Modified muscle use or injury can produce a stereotypic inflammatory response in which neutrophils rapidly invade, followed by macrophages. This inflammatory response coincides with muscle repair, regeneration, and growth, which involve activation and proliferation of satellite cells, followed by their terminal differentiation. Recent investigations have begun to explore the relationship betwee...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2010
Cristina Borselli Hannah Storrie Frank Benesch-Lee Dmitry Shvartsman Christine Cezar Jeff W Lichtman Herman H Vandenburgh David J Mooney

Regenerative efforts typically focus on the delivery of single factors, but it is likely that multiple factors regulating distinct aspects of the regenerative process (e.g., vascularization and stem cell activation) can be used in parallel to affect regeneration of functional tissues. This possibility was addressed in the context of ischemic muscle injury, which typically leads to necrosis and ...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology 2007
Scott C Bryer Timothy J Koh

The hypothesis of this study was the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) is required for accumulation of inflammatory cells in injured skeletal muscle and for efficient muscle regeneration. Expression of uPAR was elevated at 1 and 3 days after cardiotoxin-induced muscle injury in wild-type mice before returning to baseline levels. Neutrophil accumulation peaked 1 day postinjury...

2015
Nobuaki Chinzei Shinya Hayashi Takeshi Ueha Takaaki Fujishiro Noriyuki Kanzaki Shingo Hashimoto Shuhei Sakata Shinsuke Kihara Masahiko Haneda Yoshitada Sakai Ryosuke Kuroda Masahiro Kurosaka

The potential relationship between cell cycle checkpoint control and tissue regeneration has been indicated. Despite considerable research being focused on the relationship between p21 and myogenesis, p21 function in skeletal muscle regeneration remains unclear. To clarify this, muscle injury model was recreated by intramuscular injection of bupivacaine hydrochloride in the soleus of p21 knocko...

2012
Norio Motohashi Atsushi Asakura

Skeletal muscle possesses a remarkable ability for regeneration and can go through rapid repair following muscle injury. This regeneration depends on the activity and contributions of muscle satellite cells, which are located between the sarcolemma of myofibers and the basal lamina [1]. Upon muscle injury, satellite cells are activated, driven out of their quiescent state, and start to prolifer...

2014
Norio Motohashi Atsushi Asakura

Adult skeletal muscle possesses extraordinary regeneration capacities. After muscle injury or exercise, large numbers of newly formed muscle fibers are generated within a week as a result of expansion and differentiation of a self-renewing pool of muscle stem cells termed muscle satellite cells. Normally, satellite cells are mitotically quiescent and reside beneath the basal lamina of muscle fi...

2014
Malea M. Murphy Alexandra C. Keefe Jennifer A. Lawson Steven D. Flygare Mark Yandell Gabrielle Kardon

Adult muscle's exceptional capacity for regeneration is mediated by muscle stem cells, termed satellite cells. As with many stem cells, Wnt/β-catenin signaling has been proposed to be critical in satellite cells during regeneration. Using new genetic reagents, we explicitly test in vivo whether Wnt/β-catenin signaling is necessary and sufficient within satellite cells and their derivatives for ...

2014
Jarrod E. Church Jennifer Trieu Radhika Sheorey Annabel Y. -M. Chee Timur Naim Dale M. Baum James G. Ryall Paul Gregorevic Gordon S. Lynch

Muscles can be injured in different ways and the trauma and subsequent loss of function and physical capacity can impact significantly on the lives of patients through physical impairments and compromised quality of life. The relative success of muscle repair after injury will largely determine the extent of functional recovery. Unfortunately, regenerative processes are often slow and incomplet...

Journal: :Clinical and experimental pharmacology & physiology 2008
Gordon S Lynch Jonathan D Schertzer James G Ryall

1. In the present review, we describe how muscles can be injured by external factors, internal factors or during the performance of some actions during sports. In addition, we describe the injury to a muscle that occurs when its blood supply is interrupted, an occurrence common in clinical settings. An overview of muscle regeneration is presented, as well as a discussion of some of the potentia...

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