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Deletion of SA β‐Gal+ cells using senolytics improves muscle regeneration in old mice
Cory M. Dungan, Kevin A. Murach, Christopher J. Zdunek, Zuo Jian Tang, Georgia L. Nolt, Camille R. Brightwell, Zachary R. Hettinger, Davis A. Englund, Zheng Liu, Christopher S. Fry, Antonio Filareto, Michael Franti, Charlotte A. Peterson
Aging Cell · 2021 · ▲ 92 citations
Cellular senescence
Stem-cell exhaustion
Chronic inflammation
Senolytics
Cell culture / in vitro
Mouse
In vitro
Abstract
Abstract Systemic deletion of senescent cells leads to robust improvements in cognitive, cardiovascular, and whole‐body metabolism, but their role in tissue reparative processes is incompletely understood. We hypothesized that senolytic drugs would enhance regeneration in aged skeletal muscle. Young (3 months) and old (20 months) male C57Bl/6J mice were administered the senolytics(definition) dasatinib (5 mg/kg) and quercetin (50 mg/kg) or vehicle bi‐weekly for 4 months. Tibialis anterior (TA) was then injected with 1.2% BaCl 2 or PBS 7‐ or 28 days prior to euthanization. Senescence(definition)‐associated β‐Galactosidase positive (SA β‐Gal+) cell abundance was low in muscle from both young and old mice and increased similarly 7 days following injury in both age groups, with no effect of D+Q. Most SA β‐Gal+ cells were also CD11b+ in young and old mice 7‐ and 14 days following injury, suggesting they are infiltrating immune cells. By 14 days, SA β‐Gal+/CD11b+ cells from old mice expressed senescence genes, whereas those from young mice expressed higher levels of genes characteristic of anti‐inflammatory macrophages. SA β‐Gal+ cells remained elevated in old compared to young mice 28 days following injury, which were reduced by D+Q only in the old mice. In D+Q‐treated old mice, muscle regenerated following injury to a greater extent compared to vehicle‐treated old mice, having larger fiber cross‐sectional area after 28 days. Conversely, D+Q blunted regeneration in young mice. In vitro experiments suggested D+Q directly improve myogenic progenitor cell proliferation. Enhanced physical function and improved muscle regeneration demonstrate that senolytics have beneficial effects only in old mice.
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- DOI
- 10.1111/acel.13528
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- 2026-06-15 MST
Cite this
APA
Dungan, C.M., Murach, K.A., Zdunek, C.J., Tang, Z.J., Nolt, G.L., Brightwell, C.R., Hettinger, Z.R., Englund, D.A., Liu, Z., Fry, C.S., Filareto, A., Franti, M., & Peterson, C.A. (2021). Deletion of SA β‐Gal+ cells using senolytics improves muscle regeneration in old mice. <em>Aging Cell</em>. https://doi.org/10.1111/acel.13528
Vancouver
Dungan CM, Murach KA, Zdunek CJ, Tang ZJ, Nolt GL, Brightwell CR, et al. Deletion of SA β‐Gal+ cells using senolytics improves muscle regeneration in old mice. Aging Cell. 2021. doi:10.1111/acel.13528.
BibTeX
@article{cory2021Deleti,
title = {Deletion of SA β‐Gal+ cells using senolytics improves muscle regeneration in old mice},
author = {Cory M. Dungan and Kevin A. Murach and Christopher J. Zdunek and Zuo Jian Tang and Georgia L. Nolt and Camille R. Brightwell and Zachary R. Hettinger and Davis A. Englund and Zheng Liu and Christopher S. Fry and Antonio Filareto and Michael Franti and Charlotte A. Peterson},
journal = {Aging Cell},
year = {2021},
doi = {10.1111/acel.13528},
}
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