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© Research
Publication : Cell death and differentiation

DNA-PKcs regulates myogenesis in an Akt-dependent manner independent of induced DNA damage.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Cell death and differentiation - 03 Jul 2023

Sutcu HH, Montagne B, Ricchetti M

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 37400716

Link to DOI – 10.1038/s41418-023-01177-2

Cell Death Differ 2023 Jul; ():

Skeletal muscle regeneration relies on muscle stem (satellite) cells. We previously demonstrated that satellite cells efficiently and accurately repair radiation-induced DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) via the DNA-dependent kinase DNA-PKcs. We show here that DNA-PKcs affects myogenesis independently of its role in DSB repair. Consequently, this process does not require the accumulation of DSBs and it is also independent of caspase-induced DNA damage. We report that in myogenic cells DNA-PKcs is essential for the expression of the differentiation factor Myogenin in an Akt2-dependent manner. DNA-PKcs interacts with the p300-containing complex that activates Myogenin transcription. We show also that SCID mice that are deficient in DNA-PKcs, and are used for transplantation and muscle regeneration studies, display altered myofiber composition and delayed myogenesis upon injury. These defects are exacerbated after repeated injury/regeneration events resulting in reduced muscle size. We thus identify a novel, caspase-independent, regulation of myogenic differentiation, and define a differentiation phase that does not involve the DNA damage/repair process.