Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, Vol. 46, 59-68, Copyright © 1998 by The Histochemical Society, Inc.


ARTICLE

Levels of MyoD Protein Expression Following Injury of mdx and Normal Limb Muscle Are Modified by Thyroid Hormone

Judy E. Andersona, Laura M. McIntosha, Andrea N. Moor (neé Pernitsky), and Zipora Yablonka-Reuvenib
a Department of Human Anatomy and Cell Science, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada
b Department of Biological Structure, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

Correspondence to: Judy E. Anderson, Dept. of Human Anatomy and Cell Science, U. of Manitoba, 730 William Ave., Winnipeg, MB, Canada R3E 0W3.


  Summary
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Thyroid hormone (T3) affects muscle development and muscle regeneration. It also interacts with the muscle regulatory gene MyoD in culture and affects myoblast proliferation. We studied the localization of MyoD protein using a well-characterized polyclonal antibody for immunohistochemistry. Relative numbers of myogenic precursor cells per field were identified by their MyoD expression during muscle regeneration in normal and mdx dystrophic mice, with particular reference to the expression in mononuclear cells and myotubes at various T3 levels. In regeneration by normal muscles, relatively few MyoD+ nuclei per field were present in mononuclear cells of euthyroid and hypothyroid mice. MyoD staining of mononuclear cell nuclei was approximately doubled in fields of regenerating muscles of normal hyperthyroid compared to euthyroid mice, and was observed in precursors that appeared to be aligned before fusion into myotubes. In mdx regenerating muscle, twofold more mononuclear cells positive for MyoD were present in all three treatment groups compared to normal muscles regenerating under the same conditions. Localization was similar to the pattern in normal euthyroid mice. However, in muscles regenerating in hyperthyroid mdx mice, both mononuclear cell nuclei and centrally located nuclei in a subpopulation (about 15%) of new myotubes formed after the crush injury were intensely stained for MyoD protein. The changes observed are consistent with reports on T3-induced alteration of muscle repair, and propose a link between MyoD regulation and the accelerated differentiation during regeneration under high T3 conditions. (J Histochem Cytochem 46:59-67, 1998)

Key Words: MyoD, muscle repair, mdx dystrophic mouse, thyroid hormone


  Introduction
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Thyroid hormone (T3) has a key role in normal muscle development (D'Albis et al. 1987,1990; Hausman and Watson 1994 ). Maturation, myosin isoform expression, and fiber growth are dependent on normal T3 levels during development. The outcome of repair in adult muscle is also affected by alterations in T3 levels. An increased T3 level in vivo shortens the time myoblasts spend in the proliferative state and speeds their transition to fusion, thereby limiting the number of myotubes resulting during repair from an injury (Pernitsky et al. 1996 ). Decreased levels of T3 in vivo slow myoblast proliferation and reduce the number of new myotubes formed in the course of repair (McIntosh et al. 1994 ; McIntosh and Anderson 1995 ). Consequently, both high and low levels of T3 impair the final extent of regeneration. The new myotubes formed under high T3 conditions are smaller in normal control muscles after crush injury, whereas mdx myotube diameter is unchanged by T3 treatment (Pernitsky et al. 1996 ). By comparison, mdx fiber diameter is reduced under low T3 conditions, whereas control fiber diameter is unchanged (McIntosh et al. 1994 ). These shifts in proliferation and myotube formation as a result of changes in T3 levels are therefore distinct in the mdx mutant and its parent strain. The shifts in proliferation and myotube formation are also observed during the progression of muscular dystrophy in the mdx mouse. Dystrophy is more severe in slow and cardiac muscles made hyperthyroid (Anderson et al. 1994 ; Pernitsky et al. 1996 ) and more severe in the fast tibialis anterior muscle under hypothyroid conditions (McIntosh et al. 1994 ; McIntosh and Anderson 1995 ). These observations regarding the influence of T3 on muscle repair in vivo were made at the histological level using tritiated thymidine incorporation in combination with detailed morphological analyses.

To further characterize the cellular events associated with the effects of T3, we analyzed the expression of MyoD protein during repair in vivo in normal and mdx mice using immunocytochemistry. MyoD is one of four muscle regulatory factors (MRFs) that direct the specification of mesodermal cell transition into the muscle lineage (Weintraub 1993 ; Megeney and Rudnicki 1995 ; Cossu et al. 1996 ; Yun and Wold 1996 ). In muscle development, MyoD is expressed early in the sequence of the myogenic lineage, whereas myogenin is expressed later as myoblasts progress through the differentiation program. The MRFs are also detected in myogenic cultures (Wright et al. 1989 ; Hinterberger et al. 1991 ; Smith et al. 1993 ; Maley et al. 1994 ). This expression by cells already committed to the muscle lineage likely reflects the role of MRFs in the transition from proliferation to differentiation (Olson 1992 , Olson 1993 ; Weintraub 1993 ). As in development, during myogensis in culture, MyoD expression precedes myogenin expression (Hinterberger et al. 1991 ; Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1994 , Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1997 ). Cell culture studies also noted that MyoD is first seen in proliferating myoblasts (Tapscott et al. 1988 ; Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1994 , Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1997 ). MyoD expression in regenerating muscle occurs shortly after injury in mononuclear cells, as studied at the transcriptional level using in situ hybridization (Grounds et al. 1992 ) and at the protein level using immunocytochemistry (Füchtbauer and Westphal 1992 ). Analysis at the mRNA level also revealed a similar distribution of MyoD+ and myogenin+ myoblasts in the regenerating areas observed in normal (Grounds et al. 1992 ) and dystrophic muscles (Garrett and Anderson 1995 ). Therefore, MyoD is one of the early markers for myogenic cells in vivo (Grounds et al. 1992 ) and in culture (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1994 ). Moreover, T3 was shown to increase the expression of MyoD in culture (Carnac et al. 1992 ). We were therefore interested to use immunostaining for MyoD to identify relative numbers of myoblasts during muscle repair in vivo, especially in response to various levels of T3. On the basis of previous studies on normal C57 and mdx dystrophic mice, our hypothesis was that myoblasts expressing MyoD would be present in greater numbers per field in mdx dystrophic than normal regenerating muscles. We also hypothesized that MyoD+ mononuclear cell nuclei would be observed in greater relative numbers in regenerating muscles after treatment with T3 compared to regenerating muscles in untreated mice or those with low thyroid hormone levels, but that the pattern of expression during muscle differentiation would be similar between the two strains.


  Materials and Methods
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Animals and Thyroid Hormone Experiments
Normal control (C57Bl/10 ScSn) mice and the mdx mutant strain (C57Bl/10ScSn mdx) were bred and maintained in the Central Animal Care Facility at the University of Manitoba, on a 12~12-hr light~dark schedule. All treatments and surgical procedures were approved by the Animal Protocol Committee of the University of Manitoba.

Hypothyroidism was produced in normal control and mdx dystrophic mice as reported (McIntosh et al. 1994 ) by consumption of propylthiouracil (0.05%) in drinking water for 8 weeks, starting at 3 weeks of age. Hyperthyroidism was induced by injecting tri-iodothyronine (T3) SC at a dose of 2 µg/g body weight/day (Anderson et al. 1994 ; Pernitsky et al. 1996 ) for 4 weeks, starting at 5.5 weeks of age. Nondystrophic normal control and mdx littermate mice were left untreated (euthyroid) for the same periods for each condition, respectively. For each of the treatment groups (hypothyroid, euthyroid, hyperthyroid) of normal and dystrophic animals, there were four to nine animals per group. The variation in group size was due to the examination of sections derived from more than one previous experiment.

Four days before sacrifice, anesthetized mice received a crush injury to the right tibialis anterior (TA) muscle as previously described (McIntosh et al. 1994 , after Grounds and McGeachie 1989 ). The right TA was subject to crush injury and the left TA was only exposed by a skin incision but the muscle remained intact and served as a control muscle. After 4 days of recovery, the crushed and intact TA muscles were dissected from the hindlimbs, embedded together in OCT (Miles; Elkhart, IN) for longitudinal or cross-sections, and frozen for cryosectioning (7-µm-thick sections). The TA muscle was chosen for the present investigations because sections were available from animals in all three treatment groups and from both strains. The TA is often used for studies of muscle regeneration because it lies subcutaneously and is easily accessible to surgical or other interventions applied to stimulate muscle repair. The TA is also a large muscle relative to other muscles, such as the extensor digitorum longus muscle, and is quite homogeneous and therefore representative of fast-twitch muscles. The sequence and timing of the regeneration process in the TA muscle are very well characterized (e.g., Grounds and McGeachie 1989 ). In particular, the interval of 4 days post crush injury was chosen in accordance with previous detailed reports of morphometric and autoradiographic studies that documented myoblast proliferation and fusion, and myotube growth in normal and mdx regenerating muscles in our laboratory (McIntosh et al. 1994 ; Anderson et al. 1995 ; McIntosh and Anderson 1995 ; Pernitsky et al. 1996 ) and reports from other investigators (e.g., Grounds et al. 1992 ; Mitchell et al. 1992 ).

Immunohistochemistry
Sections consisting of pairs of crushed and uncrushed muscle were immunostained for MyoD protein using standard protocols for immunofluorescence. The antibody against MyoD was a polyclonal antibody raised in rabbit, and was a generous gift from Dr. S. Alemà (Institute of Cell Biology, CNR, Rome, Italy). Its characteristics were reported previously in studies of myogenesis of rat satellite cells (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1994 ) and mouse-derived myogenic cultures (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1997 ). As described in both reports, the antibody stains nuclei of mouse and rat myogenic cultures. In cultures, the staining pattern with the polyclonal antibody against MyoD is identical to that of a mouse monoclonal antibody against MyoD (clone 5.8A, originally reported by Dias et al. 1992 ), as concluded from double immunostaining with the polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies of myogenic cultures of mouse and rat origin. However, we found the polyclonal antibody was a better tool for recognizing MyoD+ nuclei in vivo because it gave a more intense stain and had lower background. High background staining is a general problem with mouse monoclonals used to stain mouse tissues. The antibody to MyoD immunoprecipitates a 45-kD protein, shifts the MyoD band in gel retardation assays of C2 nuclear extracts (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1994 , Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1997 ), and does not crossreact with myogenin or myf5 in mass cultures from MyoD knockout mice (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rudnicki, work in progress) or in double staining experiments with myogenin monoclonal antibodies on intact fiber cultures (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1997 ).

The sections were warmed to room temperature, air-dried, and blocked overnight with sterile Tris-buffered saline (TBS) containing normal goat serum [0.05 M Tris, 0.15 M NaCl, 1% normal goat serum (NGS), pH 7.4]. After a thorough rinse (three times) with TBS containing Tween-20 (0.05%), sections were incubated with the primary antibody against MyoD for 1 hr at room temperature, followed by overnight incubation in a humid chamber at 4C. After rinsing in TBS-Tween-20 (three times), sections were incubated for 1-2 hr with fluorescein-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories; West Grove, PA) diluted 1~75 in TBS-NGS, rinsed in TBS-Tween 20, and mounted in Vectashield mounting medium (Vector Laboratories; Burlingame, CA). Sections processed without primary antibody and those processed with nonrelated rabbit IgGs served as procedural controls and were run for each staining procedure on each type of tissue (hyperthyroid, euthyroid, hypothyroid, and normal and mdx muscle). These controls resulted in the absence of nuclear stain in intact and regenerating muscles. At least three to six sections from different animals of each group were each stained for MyoD in repeat experiments to confirm findings. Sections of crush-injured muscle were viewed in the regenerating region of the muscle (identified using phase-contrast optics), which was located midway between the crush site and surviving muscle as systematically defined in a previous report (McIntosh et al. 1994 ), to ensure that observations were representative of the previous findings for each treatment group. All sections were viewed on a Zeiss photomicroscope equipped with epifluorescence and phase contrast optics without knowledge of their source, and were photographed through the x20 objective for an overview of the regenerating tissue, using Kodak EL 135 (400 ASA) color film.


  Results
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

The detailed characterization of muscle regenerating in normal C57 and mdx mice under low (hypothyroid), standard (euthyroid), and high T3 (hyperthyroid) conditions appears elsewhere (McIntosh et al. 1994 ; McIntosh and Anderson 1995 ; Pernitsky et al. 1996 ). Those previous reports include examination of the density of myotubes formed after 4 days of muscle regeneration, the proportions of new myotube nuclei that as myoblasts had proliferated and fused with myotubes between 3 and 4 days of recovery, and the growth and differentiation (expression of developmental myosin heavy chain) of new myotubes. Likewise, detailed descriptions of T3 effects on mdx mouse dystrophy are reported (as above; and Anderson et al. 1994 ). These earlier studies showed that the differences between the treatment groups can be seen at 4 days post injury. On the basis of the previous work, the present investigation was made under the same conditions, and focused on the 4 day post-injury time point using sections from the same muscles analyzed in the earlier studies as a representative profile of early regeneration and myotube formation.

MyoD Immunolocalization in Regenerating Normal (C57) Muscle
Intact fibers adjacent to the crush site (and fibers in normal contralateral muscles) showed no staining of nuclei. In euthyroid muscles after 4 days of repair, infrequent mononucleated cells contained MyoD+ nuclei, but many other mononuclear cells did not (Figure 1A). A low level of nonspecific background staining was present in the cytoplasm of cells in the crushed region of muscles. This type of nonspecific staining was seen by us using other antibodies as well (Anderson et al. 1991 , Anderson et al. 1995 ). Sections in which the primary antibody was omitted from the staining protocol showed low background fluorescence after processing that included the careful blocking and washing steps reported above (not shown).



View larger version (104K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 1. Immunofluorescence microscopy localization of MyoD protein in normal regenerating muscle. Sections were stained with a rabbit polyclonal antibody against MyoD, followed by fluorescein-conjugated donkey anti-rabbit IgG. The sections are from (A) euthyroid, (B) hypothyroid, and (C,D) hyperthyroid mice. Low-level nonspecific background staining is present in the cytoplasm of some cells and in the extracellular matrix surrounding fibers that remained intact. (A) Euthyroid normal muscle: few mononuclear cells have MyoD+ nuclei in euthyroid muscle. (B) Hypothyroid normal muscle: mononuclear cell nuclei are stained for MyoD. (C,D) Hyperthyroid normal muscle: MyoD+ nuclei are present in nuclei of mononuclear myoblasts, including some (arrows) that are aligned longitudinally in the regenerating muscle, as identified using phase-contrast optics (D). Bar = 50 µm.

In hypothyroid mice, staining for MyoD protein and the relative number of MyoD+ nuclei in mononuclear cells per field of mononuclear cells were similar in muscle regenerating between the crush site and the surviving muscle compared to the areas of regenerating muscle in euthyroid mice (Figure 1B). Under hyperthyroid conditions in similar fields of regenerating muscle, we identified approximately twice as many mononuclear cells per field that were positive for MyoD in their nuclei compared to the number per field observed in euthyroid and hypothyroid regenerating muscles. As shown in Figure 1C, many of those MyoD+ nuclei were within the mononuclear cells that were aligned longitudinally before fusion into myotubes, as characterized using phase-contrast and comparison with other reports using sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin or Gomori's trichrome stain. Newly formed myotubes in the same region (identification confirmed using phase-contrast; Figure 1D) did not contain MyoD+ nuclei in normal muscles regenerating under hyperthyroid conditions.

MyoD Immunolocalization in Regenerating mdx Muscle
Overall, the number of MyoD+ nuclei in mononuclear cells per field was greater (roughly twofold) in all mdx treatment groups compared to the relative density of MyoD+ mononuclear cell nuclei that were observed in normal regenerating muscles. In euthyroid mdx mice, regenerating muscles had MyoD+ nuclei in mononuclear cells and very new myotubes (Figure 2A). As in normal muscle, there was background staining of the extracellular matrix surrounding intact fibers. The mdx hypothyroid group of regenerating muscles also demonstrated MyoD+ nuclei in mononuclear cells. In two sections of one muscle, MyoD+ nuclei were observed in myotubes and cells aligned longitudinally, although not fused into myotubes (Figure 2B). Finally, in the hyperthyroid mdx group, the relative density of mononuclear cells with MyoD+ nuclei was similar to that observed in regenerating muscles in euthyroid and hypothyroid mdx mice, some of which were noted to be very intensely stained (Figure 2C and Figure 2D). In addition, intense nuclear staining for MyoD protein was observed in approximately 15% of the newly formed myotubes identified by phase-contrast (Figure 2E and Figure 2F).



View larger version (144K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 2. Immunofluorescence microscopy localization of MyoD in mdx regenerating muscle. The sections are from (A) euthyroid, (B) hypothyroid, and (C-F) hyperthyroid mice. MyoD+ nuclei are present in mononuclear cells, some of which are aligned longitudinally in the regenerating muscle (arrows). (D,E) Hyperthyroid mdx muscle demonstrates intensely stained MyoD+ nuclei in some of the newly formed myotubes. (F) Phase-contrast visualization of the field shown in (E) demonstrates that many myotubes are present, although only one contained MyoD+ nuclei. Cells surrounding myotubes are generally not stained in hyperthyroid groups. Bar = 50 µm.

In intact fibers away from the crush injury (and in contralateral mdx muscles; not shown), there was no nuclear stain on myofibers that contained only peripheral nuclei (Figure 3A, hyperthyroid mdx group). However, MyoD+ nuclei were consistently observed in the very large myotubes (Figure 3B, hyperthyroid mdx group). These large myotubes (which contained central nuclei) were formed after earlier dystrophic damage, as characterized by other studies, and not as a result of the imposed crush injury. Nuclei in those large myotubes were less intensely stained relative to nuclei in the new myotubes formed since the crush injury. Undamaged fibers in regions closer to the regenerating area had occasional positive nuclei in their periphery. Examples are shown for surviving fibers in untreated mdx muscles (Figure 3C) and in older hyperthyroid fibers after regeneration (Figure 3B). By their location, these are nuclei in the satellite cells (i.e., cells that contribute myogenic precursors during growth and repair and are known to be located adjacent to myofibers).



View larger version (91K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 3. Immunofluroescence microscopy localization of MyoD in intact mdx muscle. Sections are from (A,B) hyperthyroid and (C) euthyroid mice. (A) No nuclear MyoD protein is localized on undamaged fibers, here observed in longitudinal section. (B) MyoD+ nuclei (arrows) are located centrally in a large myotube, formed after original dystrophic fiber damage, and are also localized adjacent to that myotube in the satellite cell position (arrowhead). (C) Surviving fibers close to the site of crush injury show MyoD+ nuclei (in putative satellite cells) at the periphery of fibers (arrowheads) in oblique section. Bar = 50 µm.


  Discussion
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

In this study we have utilized immunostaining for MyoD to identify relative numbers of myogenic precursor cells at one time point during regeneration of normal and mdx muscle. With this approach, the influence of various levels of T3 was analyzed on representative regions of regenerating muscle containing mononuclear cells and new myotubes. Approximately two times more MyoD+ mononuclear cells per field were observed in mdx than in control regenerating muscles, and the relative density of MyoD+ nuclei in mononuclear cells in normal regenerating muscles increased under hyperthyroid conditions, in agreement with our hypothesis. However, we also noted MyoD+ myonuclei in well-differentiated large myotubes in mdx muscle regenerating from previous dystrophic damage, and in satellite cell nuclei next to fiber segments that survived the crush injury. Perhaps the most striking observation was that only repair in mdx muscles under high T3 conditions resulted in newly formed myotubes with MyoD+ nuclei. The relative number of MyoD+ mononuclear cells did not increase in mdx muscles regenerating in hyperthyroid compared to euthyroid conditions. These latter findings indicate that the pattern of differentiation is distinct in muscles regenerating in the two different strains, because MyoD+ nuclei persist in mdx but not in control myotubes regenerating from both dystrophy and crush injury during T3 treatment. The changes in normal muscle regeneration with various T3 conditions and the absence of relative changes in myoblast populations in mdx regenerating muscles are consistent with previous reports from the same experiments and also with detailed in vitro studies of myoblast proliferation and differentiation (Pernitsky and Anderson 1996 ; Pernitsky et al., submitted for publication). However, because these experiments examine only a single time point in regeneration, follow up studies later in regeneration are required to determine the length of MyoD expression in myotube nuclei under different T3 conditions, since that expression may relate to the functional endpoint of the regeneration process.

The changes in MyoD staining are consistent with observed changes in the repair process, determined through morphometric studies of myotube density and using autoradiographic tracing of myoblast fusion into myotubes (McIntosh et al. 1994 ; McIntosh and Anderson 1995 ; Pernitsky et al. 1996 ). The present work examined the relative density of MyoD+ cells in representative fields of muscle regenerating between the site of crush injury and the surviving muscle, rather than quantifying the exact numbers of myogenic precursors for a statistical analysis of MyoD expression. Previous reports have already measured the details of myoblast proliferation, myoblast fusion into myotubes during regeneration, and the density of myotubes formed under various T3 conditions (McIntosh et al. 1994 ; McIntosh and Anderson 1995 ; Pernitsky et al. 1996 ). At the time of the present studies, information on c-met receptor localization in both quiescent satellite cells and activated, proliferating myoblasts in vivo was not known (Tatsumi et al., submitted for publication). Myoblasts in the same muscles regenerating under euthyroid and high T3 conditions of normal and dystrophic mice were identified by staining with antibodies to developmental myosin heavy chain (Pernitsky et al. 1996 ), and can also be stained with antibodies to {alpha}-smooth muscle actin during or after MyoD expression in myogenesis on intact fibers (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1994 ), and by in situ hybridization with or without tandem immunostaining (e.g., Grounds et al. 1992 ; Garrett and Anderson 1995 ). Given those limitations, the semiquantitative changes in the relative level of MyoD expression in myoblasts per field were very consistent in muscles of each treatment group, because observations were made in the region between surviving fibers and the necrotic crush site in each muscle as described earlier (McIntosh et al. 1994 ). Together with previous findings on regeneration in mdx muscles and the influences of high and low levels of T3, the present MyoD immunolocalization study provides further understanding of muscle repair at the molecular level to supplement information from available quantitative studies from the same experiments.

MyoD+ mononuclear cells located in the satellite position near regions of muscle injury are probably activated satellite cells, as seen in cultures of intact fibers (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1994 , Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1997 ) or elongating muscle precursors about to fuse with mature surviving fibers in regenerating muscles (Pernitsky et al. 1996 ). The location of MyoD in mononuclear cells and myotubes observed in this study, agrees with a previous report on regeneration of mouse TA muscle in the bupivacaine-treated autograft model of repair. That study showed that MyoD+ nuclei were present in myoblasts before fusion and in newly formed myotubes for 2 weeks post grafting. That 2-week interval in autograft regeneration was longer than observed from crush injury studies, because the former regenerative process is more prolonged and involves the entire muscle including the neurovascular supply (Füchtbauer and Westphal 1992 ). In another study in rat tibialis anterior muscles regenerating after a freeze-injury, MyoD protein was observed in mononuclear cells. MyoD protein was only detected in nuclei of newly formed myotubes when repair occurred under denervation (or tenotomy) conditions (Koishi et al. 1995 ). Because downregulation of MyoD expression by electrical activity has been reported (Eftimie et al. 1991 ), the persistence of MyoD expression in a subset of myotubes formed in regenerating mdx but not in control muscles suggests that the innervation of those myotubes may be delayed by T3 treatment. However, the persistent MyoD protein in myotube nuclei in mdx regenerating muscles in this study was not accompanied by decreased myotube diameter (Pernitsky et al. 1996 ), so delays in reinnervation are unlikely to account for the prolonged MyoD expression in mdx myotube nuclei under hyperthyroid conditions.

Although exact comparisons are difficult because of the different models of injury-induced repair, it is possible that species and strain differences can explain the different results of these MyoD immunostaining reports, because only mdx but not control myotubes showed MyoD+ nuclei during regeneration under hyperthyroid conditions. Other strain differences have been noted in the response to T3 by myoblasts in vitro (Pertnitsky and Anderson 1996). Recent studies showed that the difference between normal and mdx myoblast reponses to T3 in vitro is partly explained by the ability of mdx myoblasts to continue cycling during MyoD expression. Normal control myoblasts, by comparison, respond to T3 by either differentiating and expressing MyoD protein or proliferating as MyoD-negative cells (Pernitsky and Anderson, submitted for publication). In addition, our preliminary observations (via immunolocalization) with primary myogenic cultures from rat and mouse muscles suggest that MyoD protein expression is a more consistent finding in myotube nuclei in mouse cultures compared to rat cultures. Many rat myotubes do not show detectable levels of MyoD, whereas mononuclear cells in rat and mouse cultures show similar stainability for MyoD. (Expression of myogenin protein is consistent in myotube nuclei in cultures from both species.) Although tissue culture studies show myotube nuclei that are positive for MyoD protein, the situation in vivo is much more complex and may provide a more stringent restriction on MyoD expression in myotubes. Perhaps T3 induces MyoD expression by myogenic precursors in mdx muscles to persist for longer during the repair process, and pushes that expression to continue past the stage when precursors fuse into myotubes. Alternatively, high levels of T3 may lead to a precocious fusion of myoblasts, not allowing sufficient time for the normal course of MyoD downregulation during myogenesis. Nevertheless, high T3 levels promote early differentiation of normal muscle during repair in vivo, as was previously reported (Pernitsky et al. 1996 ). However, because MyoD expression appears in both new and more mature (larger) myotubes formed by fusion under hyperthyroid conditions in mdx regenerating muscle, the effects of T3 are long-lasting. Perhaps distinctions between MRF expression in normal and mdx muscle fibers could help to account for the greater extent of repair in a given time period after injury of mdx than of normal muscles.

Our in vivo studies cannot hint as to whether T3 works directly on myoblasts or on an intermediate agent which in its turn affects myogenesis. However, different cell culture studies have shown that T3 directly affects myogenesis. T3 acts specifically to regulate MyoD (and myogenin) through thyroid response elements on those genes (Carnac et al. 1992 ; Downes et al. 1993 ; Muscat et al. 1993 , Muscat et al. 1994 , Muscat et al. 1995a , Muscat et al. 1995b ). Exposure to added T3 results in a decrease in the proportion of myoblasts in S phase (Pernitsky and Anderson 1996 ). Additional tissue culture studies suggest that T3 may accelerate recruitment and the expression of MyoD, because cultures under low T3 conditions show a delay in myogenic differentiation (Carnac et al. 1992 ). The present results do not indicate whether T3 acts on cells that are already expressing MyoD or on myoblasts that have not yet entered the phase of MyoD expression (i.e. "pre-MyoD" cells, as discussed by Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1997 ). Studies involving intact fiber cultures, and a direct analysis of population dynamics and the transition from the pre-MyoD to the MyoD+ state to the post-MyoD state would help to address that question. We are presently devising models to address this issue.

Different cell culture and in vivo models have led to a variety of conclusions regarding the expression of MyoD in proliferating and differentiating myoblasts. During myogenesis of satellite cells on isolated fibers, MyoD expression is completely correlated with myoblast proliferation, and MyoD expression is downregulated on transition into the myogenin-expressing state. Those studies used the same MyoD antibody as in the present experiments, which did not crossreact to detect myogenin. In cell cultures of dispersed tissue, MyoD expression was less transient and cells expressing myogenin were often positive for MyoD as well (Yablonka-Reuveni and Rivera 1997 ). Other cell culture analyses showed that although MyoD may first be expressed in proliferating myoblasts, the presence of MyoD in its active state signals cell cycle withdrawal and terminal differentiation (Halevy et al. 1995 ). Our studies at the immunohistochemical level did not attempt to specifically analyze the proliferation vs differentiation state of the myogenic precursor cells, but rather used MyoD protein expression to identify relative numbers of myogenic precursor cells in regenerating muscle in vivo.

Clarification of MyoD expression under different conditions in vivo is a valuable addition to understanding key events of precursor proliferation, myotube formation, and differentiation in muscle repair. In the present immunohistochemical study, we report semiquantitative data on relative expression of MyoD by mononuclear cells that are consistent with previous morphometric and autoradiographic studies on the same tissues, in particular the relatively greater expression by mononuclear cells in mdx than in normal regenerating muscles. However, the appearance of MyoD+ nuclei in newly formed mdx myotubes after injury under high T3 conditions suggests that the regulation of myoblast fusion and myotube differentiation may be modified in mdx mice and may contribute towards the differential regeneration capacity of mdx muscle compared to normal muscle. The study represents an initial approach to the molecular analysis of the influence of T3 on myoblast commitment and myotube differentiation during in vivo regeneration.


  Acknowledgments

Supported by grants to JEA from the Manitoba Health Research Council and the Paul H.T. Thorlakson Foundation, and grants to ZY-R from the Cooperative State Research Service-US Department of Agriculture (Agreement No. 93-37206-9301) and the National Institutes of Health (AR 39677 and AG 13798). Studentships were awarded from the Medical Research Council of Canada (LMM) and the Manitoba Health Research Council (ANM).

We are grateful for the technical assistance of Anthony Rivera and Roy Simpson.

Received for publication March 27, 1997; accepted July 10, 1997.


  Literature Cited
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Anderson JE, Liu L, Kardami E (1991) Distinctive patterns of bFGF distribution in degenerating and regenerating areas of dystrophic (mdx) striated muscles. Dev Biol 147:96-109[Medline]

Anderson JE, Liu L, Kardami E (1994) The effects of hyperthyroidism on muscular dystrophy in the mdx mouse: greater dystrophy in cardiac and soleus muscle. Muscle Nerve 17:64-73[Medline]

Anderson JE, Mitchell CM, McGeachie JK, Grounds MD (1995) The time course of basic fibroblast growth factor expression in crush-injured skeletal muscles of SJL/J and BALB/c mice. Exp Cell Res 216:325-334[Medline]

Carnac G, Albagli OA, Vandromme M, Pinset C, Montarras D, Laudet V, Bonnieu A (1992) 3,5,3'-Triiodothyronine positively regulates both MyoD1 gene transcription and terminal differentiation in C2 myoblasts. Mol Endocrinol 6:1185-1194[Abstract]

Cossu G, Kelly R, Tajbakhsh S, Di Donna S, Vivarelli E, Buckingham M (1996) Activation of different myogenic pathways: myf-5 is induced by the neural tube and MyoD by the dorsal ectoderm in mouse paraxial mesoderm. Development 122:429-437[Abstract/Free Full Text]

d'Albis A, Chanoine C, Janmot C, Mira JC, Couteaux R (1990) Muscle-specific response to thyroid hormone of myosin isoform transitions during rat postnatal development. Eur J Biochem 193:155-161[Abstract]

d'Albis A, Lenfant-Guyot M, Janmot C, Chanoine C, Weinman J, Gallien CL (1987) Regulation by thyroid hormones of terminal differentiation in the skeletal dorsal muscle: I. Neonate mouse. Dev Biol 123:25-32[Medline]

Dias P, Parham DM, Shapiro DN, Tapscott SJ, Houghton PJ (1992) Monoclonal antibodies to the myogenic regulatory protein MyoD1: epitope mapping and diagnostic utility. Cancer Res 52:6431-6439[Abstract]

Downes M, Griggs R, Atkins A, Olson EN, Muscat GE (1993) Identification of a thyroid hormone response element in the mouse myogenin gene: characterization of the thyroid hormone and retinoid X receptor heterodimeric binding site. Cell Growth Differ 4:901-909[Abstract]

Eftimie R, Brenner HR, Buonanno A (1991) Myogenin and MyoD join a family of skeletal muscle genes regulated by electrical activity. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 88:1349-1353[Abstract]

Füchtbauer E-M, Westphal H (1992) MyoD and myogenin are coexpressed in regenerating skeletal muscle of the mouse. Dev Dyn 193:34-39[Medline]

Garrett KL, Anderson JE (1995) Co-localization of bFGF and the myogenic regulatory gene myogenin in dystrophic mdx muscle precursors and young myotubes in vivo. Dev Biol 169:596-608[Medline]

Grounds MD, Garrett KL, Lai MC, Wright WE, Beilharz MW (1992) Identification of skeletal muscle precursor cells in vivo by use of MyoD1 and myogenin probes. Cell Tissue Res 267:99-104[Medline]

Grounds MD, McGeachie JK (1989) A comparison of muscle precursor replication in crush injured skeletal muscle of Swiss and BALB/C mice. Cell Tissue Res 255:385-391[Medline]

Halevy O, Novitch BG, Spicer DB, Skapek SX, Rhee J, Hannon GJ, Beach D, Lassar AB (1995) Correlation of terminal cell cycle arrest of skeletal muscle with induction of p21 by MyoD. Science 267:1018-1021[Medline]

Hausman GJ, Watson R (1994) Regulation of fetal muscle development by thyroxine. Acta Anat 149:21-30[Medline]

Hinterberger TJ, Sassoon DA, Rhodes SJ, Konieczny SF (1991) Expression of the muscle regulatory MRF4 during somite and skeletal myofiber development. Dev Biol 147:144-156[Medline]

Koishi K, Zhang M, McLennan IS, Harris AJ (1995) MyoD protein accumulates in satellite cells and is neurally regulated in regenerating myotubes and skeletal muscle fibers. Dev Dyn 204:244-254

Maley MAL, Fan Y, Beilharz MW, Grounds MD (1994) Intrinsic differences in MyoD and myogenin expression between primary cultures of SJL/J and BALB/c skeletal muscle. Exp Cell Res 211:99-107[Medline]

McIntosh LM, Anderson JE (1995) Hypothyroidism increases muscle precursor proliferation and reduces myotube fusion in mdx limb muscle. Biochem Cell Biol 73:181-190[Medline]

McIntosh LM, Pernitsky AN, Anderson JE (1994) The effects of altered metabolism (hypothyroidism) on muscle repair in the mdx dystrophic mouse. Muscle Nerve 17:444-453[Medline]

Megeney LA, Rudnicki MA (1995) Determination vs. differentiation and the MyoD family of transcription factors. Biochem Cell Biol 73:723-732[Medline]

Mitchell CA, McGeachie JK, Grounds MD (1992) Cellular differences in regeneration of murine skeletal muscle: a quantitative histological study in SJL/J and BALB/c mice. Cell Tissue Res 269:159-166[Medline]

Muscat GEO, Downes M, Dowhan DH (1995b) Regulation of vertebrate muscle differentiation by thyroid hormone: the role of the myoD gene family. BioEssays 17:211-218[Medline]

Muscat GEO, Griggs R, Downes M, Emery J (1993) Characterization of the thyroid hormone response element in the skeletal {alpha}-actin gene: negative regulation of T3 receptor binding by the retinoid X receptor. Cell Growth Differ 4:269-279[Abstract]

Muscat GEO, Mynett-Johnson L, Dowhan D, Downes M, Griggs R (1994) Activation of myoD gene transcription by 3,5,3'-triiodo-L-thyronine: a direct role for the thyroid hormone and retinoid X receptors. Nucleic Acids Res 22:583-591[Abstract]

Muscat GEO, Rea S, Downes M (1995a) Identification of a regulatory function for an orphan receptor in muscle: COUP-TF II affects the expression of the myoD gene family during myogenesis. Nucleic Acids Res 23:1311-1318[Abstract]

Olson EN (1992) Interplay between proliferation and differentiation within the myogenic lineage. Dev Biol 154:261-272[Medline]

Olson EN (1993) Signal transduction pathways that regulate skeletal muscle gene expression. Mol Endocrinol 7:369-378

Pernitsky AN, Anderson JE (1996) Differential effects of 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine on control and mdx myoblasts and fibroblasts: analysis by flow cytometry. Exp Cell Res 227:214-222[Medline]

Pernitsky AN, McIntosh LM, Anderson JE (1996) Hyperthyroidism impairs early repair in normal but not dystrophic mdx mouse tibialis anterior muscle. An in vivo study. Biochem Cell Biol 74:315-324[Medline]

Smith TH, Block NE, Rhodes SJ, Konieczny SF, Miller JB (1993) A unique pattern of expression of the four muscle regulatory factor proteins distinguishes somitic from embryonic, fetal and newborn mouse myogenic cells. Development 117:1125-1133[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Tapscott SJ, Davis RL, Tahyer MJ, Cheng P-F, Weintraub H, Lassar AB (1988) MyoD1: a nuclear phosphoprotein requiring a myc homology region to convert fibroblasts to myoblasts. Science 242:405-411[Medline]

Weintraub H (1993) The MyoD family and myogenesis: Redundancy, networks, and thresholds. Cell 75:1241-1244[Medline]

Wright WE, Sassoon DA, Lin VK (1989) Myogenin, a factor regulating myogenesis, has a domain homologous to MyoD. Cell 56:607-617[Medline]

Yablonka-Reuveni Z, Rivera AJ (1994) Temporal expression of regulatory and structural muscle proteins during myogenesis of satellite cells on isolated adult rat fibers. Dev Biol 164:588-603[Medline]

Yablonka-Reuveni Z, Rivera AJ (1997) Influence of PDGF-BB on proliferation and transition through the MyoD-myogenin-MEF2A expression program during myogenesis in mouse C2 myoblasts. Growth Factors, in press

Yun KS, Wold B (1996) Skeletal muscle determination and differentiation: story of a core regulatory network and its context. Curr Opin Cell Biol 8:877-889[Medline]