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Globular Adiponectin as a Complete Mesoangioblast Regulator: Role in Proliferation, Survival, Motility, and Skeletal Muscle Differentiation

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TLDR
In vivo experiments confirm that globular adiponectin increases the survival, engraftment, and localization to muscle of mesoangioblasts in α-sarcoglycan-null mice.
Abstract
Mesoangioblasts are progenitor endowed with multipotent mesoderm differentiation ability. Despite the promising results obtained with mesoangioblast transplantation in muscle dystrophy, an improvement of their efficient engrafting and survival within damaged muscles, as well as their ex vivo activation/expansion and commitment toward myogenic lineage, is highly needed and should greatly increase their therapeutic potential. We show that globular adiponectin, an adipokine endowed with metabolic and differentiating functions for muscles, regulates vital cues of mesoangioblast cell biology. The adipokine drives mesoangioblasts to entry cell cycle and strongly counteracts the apoptotic process triggered by growth factor withdrawal, thereby serving as an activating and prosurvival stem cell factor. In addition, adiponectin provides a specific protection against anoikis, the apoptotic death due to lack of anchorage to extracellular matrix, suggesting a key protective role for these nonresident stem cells after systemic injection. Finally, adiponectin behaves as a chemoattractive factor toward mature myotubes and stimulates their differentiation toward the skeletal muscle lineage, serving as a positive regulator in mesoangioblast homing to injured or diseased muscles. We conclude that adiponectin exerts several advantageous effects on mesoangioblasts, potentially valuable to improve their efficacy in cell based therapies of diseased muscles.

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Anoikis: an emerging hallmark in health and diseases

TL;DR: The aim of this review is to analyse the molecular mechanisms governing both anoikis and anoIKis resistance, focusing on their regulation in physiological processes, as well as in several diseases, including metastatic cancers, cardiovascular diseases and diabetes.
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Adiponectin action in skeletal muscle

TL;DR: In summary, adiponectin acting in an autocrine and endocrine manner has important metabolic and insulin sensitizing effects on skeletal muscle which contribute to the overall anti-diabetic outcome of adiponECTin action.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adiponectin action: a combination of endocrine and autocrine/paracrine effects.

TL;DR: regulation of adiponectin production, its mechanism of action via receptor isoforms and signaling pathways, and its principal physiological effects (i.e., metabolic and cardiovascular) are discussed.
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Adiponectin—Consideration for its Role in Skeletal Muscle Health

TL;DR: The role of adiponectin signaling in skeletal muscle has expanded beyond that of a metabolic regulator to include several aspects of skeletal muscle function and maintenance critical to muscle health, many of which are responsive to, and mediated by, physical exercise.
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Adiponectin as a tissue regenerating hormone: more than a metabolic function

TL;DR: The role of adiponectin in tissue regeneration, mainly referring to skeletal muscle regeneration, is dealt with, a process in which adip onectin is deeply involved and increases proliferation, migration and myogenic properties of both resident stem cells and non-resident muscle precursors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

High glucose induces adipogenic differentiation of muscle-derived stem cells

TL;DR: The data highlight a previously uncharacterized differentiation route triggered by high glucose that drives not only resident stem cells of the adipose tissue but also uncommitted precursors present in muscle cells to form adipose depots, which may represent a feed-forward cycle between the regional increase in adiposity and insulin resistance that plays a key role in the pathogenesis of diabetes mellitus.
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Mesoangioblasts--vascular progenitors for extravascular mesodermal tissues.

TL;DR: Mesoangioblasts disclose not only an unexpected source of progenitors for skeletal muscle and a variety of other mesoderm-derived tissues, but also establish a lineage kinship between progenitor of vascular and extravascular mesodermal tissues, with important basic and applicative implications.
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The p38α/β MAPK functions as a molecular switch to activate the quiescent satellite cell

TL;DR: It is reported that the p38α/β family of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) reversibly regulates the quiescent state of the skeletal muscle satellite cell, providing further support that these MAPKs function as a molecular switch for satellite cell activation.
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TNF-α is a mitogen in skeletal muscle

TL;DR: The objective of the current study was to determine whether TNF-α modulates satellite cell proliferation, and to investigate the role of TNF in muscle repair.
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Adult Mesenchymal Stem Cells: A Pluripotent Population with Multiple Applications

TL;DR: The latest research in the use of mesenchymal stem cells in transplantation for generalized diseases, local implantation for local tissue defects, and as a vehicle for genes in gene therapy protocols are summarized.
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