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NF-κB–mediated Pax7 dysregulation in the muscle microenvironment promotes cancer cachexia
Wei A. He, … , Federica Montanaro, Denis C. Guttridge
Wei A. He, … , Federica Montanaro, Denis C. Guttridge
Published October 1, 2013
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2013;123(11):4821-4835. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI68523.
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Research Article Oncology

NF-κB–mediated Pax7 dysregulation in the muscle microenvironment promotes cancer cachexia

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Abstract

Cachexia is a debilitating condition characterized by extreme skeletal muscle wasting that contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality. Efforts to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of muscle loss have predominantly focused on events intrinsic to the myofiber. In contrast, less regard has been given to potential contributory factors outside the fiber within the muscle microenvironment. In tumor-bearing mice and patients with pancreatic cancer, we found that cachexia was associated with a type of muscle damage resulting in activation of both satellite and nonsatellite muscle progenitor cells. These muscle progenitors committed to a myogenic program, but were inhibited from completing differentiation by an event linked with persistent expression of the self-renewing factor Pax7. Overexpression of Pax7 was sufficient to induce atrophy in normal muscle, while under tumor conditions, the reduction of Pax7 or exogenous addition of its downstream target, MyoD, reversed wasting by restoring cell differentiation and fusion with injured fibers. Furthermore, Pax7 was induced by serum factors from cachectic mice and patients, in an NF-κB–dependent manner, both in vitro and in vivo. Together, these results suggest that Pax7 responds to NF-κB by impairing the regenerative capacity of myogenic cells in the muscle microenvironment to drive muscle wasting in cancer.

Authors

Wei A. He, Emanuele Berardi, Veronica M. Cardillo, Swarnali Acharyya, Paola Aulino, Jennifer Thomas-Ahner, Jingxin Wang, Mark Bloomston, Peter Muscarella, Peter Nau, Nilay Shah, Matthew E.R. Butchbach, Katherine Ladner, Sergio Adamo, Michael A. Rudnicki, Charles Keller, Dario Coletti, Federica Montanaro, Denis C. Guttridge

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Figure 1

Cancer cachexia promotes myofiber damage and interstitial cell alterations.

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Cancer cachexia promotes myofiber damage and interstitial cell alteratio...
(A) Top: EM taken from ultrathin longitudinal sections of skeletal muscle biopsies from NC or PC patients. Middle: Human IgG immunofluorescence staining on muscle cross-sections from noncancer individuals (NC) and pancreatic cancer (PC) patients. Bottom: α-laminin and DAPI staining on the same patient samples. Percentages in parentheses represent body weight loss compared with pre-illness status. (B) EM analysis of ultrathin muscle longitudinal sections from control and C-26 mice. (C) Sections similar to those in A were analyzed for cellular alterations. Higher-magnification views of bracketed regions in B and C are shown at right (enlarged ×4). Scale bars: 0.5 μm (A, top); 100 μm (A, middle); 10 μm (A, bottom; B; and C).

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