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Ora Saxel

Bio: Ora Saxel is an academic researcher from Weizmann Institute of Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Actin & Cellular differentiation. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications receiving 2098 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 1977-Nature
TL;DR: The present report describes the isolation of a cloned population of myogenic cells, derived from adult dystrophic mouse muscle, that can proliferate and differentiate in cell culture.
Abstract: THE muscular dystrophies are a group of hereditary disorders manifested by a progressive wasting of the skeletal muscles. In spite of extensive studies, the nature of the primary lesion is unknown (for review see ref. 1). Because of the complex interaction between tissues, it is difficult to study this question in vivo. Therefore attempts have been made to investigate this question in cultures of dystrophic muscles of human or animal origin. Tissue explants as well as monolayer primary cell cultures contain, in addition to the myogenic cells, a heterogeneous cell population, the composition of which might differ in normal and dystrophic muscle cultures. It is difficult in such experiments to distinguish between properties intrinsic to the myogenic cells and effects exerted by other cell types. Indeed, previous experiments have yielded conflicting conclusions2–6. We therefore tested the possibility of obtaining cell cultures consisting of pure populations of myogenic cells obtained from dystrophic muscles. The present report describes the isolation of a cloned population of such cells, derived from adult dystrophic mouse muscle, that can proliferate and differentiate in cell culture.

2,039 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A close correlation was found between the amounts of mRNAs coding for these proteins and the rate of synthesis of the proteins, suggesting that the activation of stored mRNA is not a major mechanism for controlling the time at which these proteins are synthesized.

104 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A decrease by a factor of 2-3 in the amount of globin mRNA during differentiation was observed in most clones in which the gene was expressed, which indicates the conservation of the muscle-specific regulatory DNA sequences for more than 300 Myr.
Abstract: To test the evolutionary conservation of DNA sequences specifying the developmentally regulated expression of the skeletal muscle actin gene, a recombinant plasmid containing the chicken skeletal muscle actin gene was introduced into rat myogenic cells. In a significant number of isolated clones, the accumulation of chicken actin mRNA increased greatly during differentiation. To test the expression in myogenic cells of a gene that is normally expressed during terminal differentiation of another tissue, rat myogenic cells were transfected with a mouse/human beta-globin chimeric gene. A decrease by a factor of 2-3 in the amount of globin mRNA during differentiation was observed in most clones in which the gene was expressed. The results indicate the conservation of the muscle-specific regulatory DNA sequences for more than 300 Myr.

46 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recent evidence supports the possible contribution of adult stem cells in the muscle regeneration process and in particular, bone marrow-derived and muscle-derived stem cells contribute to new myofiber formation and to the satellite cell pool after injury.
Abstract: Charge, Sophie B. P., and Michael A. Rudnicki. Cellular and Molecular Regulation of Muscle Regeneration. Physiol Rev 84: 209–238, 2004; 10.1152/physrev.00019.2003.—Under normal circumstances, mamma...

2,497 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate that BMP-2 specifically converts the differentiation pathway of C2C12 myoblasts into that of osteoblast lineage cells, but that the conversion is not heritable.
Abstract: The implantation of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) into muscular tissues induces ectopic bone formation at the site of implantation. To investigate the mechanism underlying this process, we examined whether recombinant bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) converts the differentiation pathway of the clonal myoblastic cell line, C2C12, into that of osteoblast lineage. Incubating the cells with 300 ng/ml of BMP-2 for 6 d almost completely inhibited the formation of the multinucleated myotubes expressing troponin T and myosin heavy chain, and induced the appearance of numerous alkaline phosphatase (ALP)-positive cells. BMP-2 dose dependently induced ALP activity, parathyroid hormone (PTH)-dependent 3',5'-cAMP production, and osteocalcin production at concentrations above 100 ng/ml. The concentration of BMP-2 required to induce these osteoblastic phenotypes was the same as that required to almost completely inhibit myotube formation. Incubating primary muscle cells with 300 ng/ml of BMP-2 for 6 d also inhibited myotube formation, whereas induced ALP activity and osteocalcin production. Incubation with 300 ng/ml of BMP-2 suppressed the expression of mRNA for muscle creatine kinase within 6 h, whereas it induced mRNA expression for ALP, PTH/PTH-related protein (PTHrP) receptors, and osteocalcin within 24-48 h. BMP-2 completely inhibited the expression of myogenin mRNA by day 3. By day 3, BMP-2 also inhibited the expression of MyoD mRNA, but it was transiently stimulated 12 h after exposure to BMP-2. Expression of Id-1 mRNA was greatly stimulated by BMP-2. When C2C12 cells pretreated with BMP-2 for 6 d were transferred to a colony assay system in the absence of BMP-2, more than 84% of the colonies generated became troponin T-positive and ALP activity disappeared. TGF-beta 1 also inhibited myotube formation in C2C12 cells, and suppressed the expression of myogenin and MyoD mRNAs without inducing that of Id-1 mRNA. However, no osteoblastic phenotype was induced by TGF-beta 1 in C2C12 cells. TGF-beta 1 potentiated the inhibitory effect of BMP-2 on myotube formation, whereas TGF-beta 1 reduced ALP activity and osteocalcin production induced by BMP-2 in C2C12 cells. These results indicate that BMP-2 specifically converts the differentiation pathway of C2C12 myoblasts into that of osteoblast lineage cells, but that the conversion is not heritable.

1,410 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The induction of endothelial vessel networks in engineered skeletal muscle tissue constructs using a three-dimensional multiculture system consisting of myoblasts, embryonic fibroblasts and endothelial cells coseeded on highly porous, biodegradable polymer scaffolds is described.
Abstract: One of the major obstacles in engineering thick, complex tissues such as muscle is the need to vascularize the tissue in vitro. Vascularization in vitro could maintain cell viability during tissue growth, induce structural organization and promote vascularization upon implantation. Here we describe the induction of endothelial vessel networks in engineered skeletal muscle tissue constructs using a three-dimensional multiculture system consisting of myoblasts, embryonic fibroblasts and endothelial cells coseeded on highly porous, biodegradable polymer scaffolds. Analysis of the conditions for induction and stabilization of the vessels in vitro showed that addition of embryonic fibroblasts increased the levels of vascular endothelial growth factor expression in the construct and promoted formation and stabilization of the endothelial vessels. We studied the survival and vascularization of the engineered muscle implants in vivo in three different models. Prevascularization improved the vascularization, blood perfusion and survival of the muscle tissue constructs after transplantation.

1,227 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
24 Feb 1989-Cell
TL;DR: The isolation, sequence, and initial characterization of the cDNA for the muscle-specific regulatory factor skeletal myogenin are described, and together with myd may constitute a set of factors that interact to regulate the determination and differentiation of muscle cells.

1,210 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of the DNA sequences of the 5' end of the clones demonstrated that although alpha- and gamma-actin genes start with a methionine codon, it is likely that post-translational removal of cysteine in addition to methionines accompanies alpha-actIn synthesis but not beta- and Gamma-Actin synthesis.
Abstract: cDNA clones encoding three classes of human actins have been isolated and characterized. The first two classes (gamma and beta, cytoplasmic actins) were obtained from a cDNA library constructed from simian virus 40-transformed human fibroblast mRNA, and the third class (alpha, muscle actin) was obtained from a cDNA library constructed from adult human muscle mRNA. A new approach was developed to enrich for full-length cDNAs. The human fibroblast cDNA plasmid library was linearized with restriction enzymes that did not cut the inserts of interest; it was then size-fractionated on gels, and the chimeric molecules of optimal length were selected for retransformation of bacteria. When the resulting clones were screened for actin-coding sequences it was found that some full-length cDNAs were enriched as much as 50- to 100-fold relative to the original frequency of full-length clones in the total library. Two types of clones were distinguished. One of these clones encodes gamma actin and contains 100 base pairs of 5' untranslated region, the entire protein coding region, and the 3' untranslated region. The second class encodes beta actin, and the longest such clone contains 45 base pairs of 5' untranslated region plus the remainder of the mRNA extending to the polyadenylic acid tail. A third class, obtained from the human muscle cDNA library, encodes alpha actin and contains 100 base pairs of 5' untranslated region, the entire coding region, and the 3' untranslated region. Analysis of the DNA sequences of the 5' end of the clones demonstrated that although beta- and gamma-actin genes start with a methionine codon (MET-Asp-Asp-Asp and MET-Glu-Glu-Glu, respectively), the alpha-actin gene starts with a methionine codon followed by a cysteine codon (MET-CYS-Asp-Glu-Asp-Glu). Since no known actin proteins start with a cysteine, it is likely that post-translational removal of cysteine in addition to methionine accompanies alpha-actin synthesis but not beta- and gamma-actin synthesis. This observation has interesting implications both for actin function and actin gene regulation and evolution.

1,161 citations