(Vasopressin) aka: Antidiuretic Hormone aka: A rginine Vasopressin
Vasopressin andInsulin-like Growth Factors Synergistically...
Transcript of Vasopressin andInsulin-like Growth Factors Synergistically...
Vol. 9, 155-163, February 1998 Cell Growth & Differentiation 155
Vasopressin and Insulin-like Growth Factors SynergisticallyInduce Myogenesis in Serum-free Medium’
Simona Minotti, Bianca Maria Scicchitano,Clara Nervi, Sigfrido Scarpa, Marco Lucarelli,Mario Molinaro, and Sergio Adamo2Dipartimento di Istologia ed Embnologia Medica [S. M., B. M. S., C. N.,M. M., S. A.] and Dipartimento di Biotecnologie Cellulari ed Ematologiae I Istituto di Clinics Chirurgica [S. S., M. L], Universit#{224}“La Sapienza,”00161 Rome, Italy
AbstractTerminal differentiation of myogenic cells has longbeen known to be positively regulated by insulin-likegrowth factors (IGFs). Arg8-vasopressin (AVP) has been
recently reported to potently Induce myogenicdifferentiation. In the present study, the effects and themechanisms of action of AVP and IGFs on myogeniccells have been investigated under conditions allowinggrowth and differentiation of myogenic cells in asimple serum-free medium. Under these conditions, L6and L5 myogenic cells slowly proliferate and do notundergo differentiation (less than I % fusion up to 7days). AVP rapidly (2-3 days) and dose-dependentlyinduces the formation of multinucleated myotubes.Creatine kinase activity and myosin accumulation arestrongly up-regulated by AVP. Insulin or IGF-I or IGF-II,at concentrations that cause extensive differentiationin serum-containing medium, induces a modest degreeof differentiation in serum-free medium. Thesimultaneous presence of AVP and of one of the IGFsin the synthetic medium induces maximaldifferentiation of L6, L5, and satellite cells. Theexpression of both myogenin and Myf-5 is dramaticallystimulated by AVP. Our results indicate that AVPinduces a significant level of myogenic differentiationin the absence of other factors. Furthermore, theysuggest that to express their full myogenic potential,IGFs require the presence of other factors normallypresent in serum and fully mimicked by AVP. Thesestudies support the conclusion that terminal myogenicdifferentiation may depend on the presence of
Received 3/4/97; revised 10/27/97; accepted 12/8/97.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by thepayment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby markedadvertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to mdi-cate this fact.1 Supported by Grant 418 from Telethon Italy. The financial support ofConsiglio Nazionale delle Richerche, Progetto Finalizzato ApplicazioniCliniche della Ricerca Oncologica (Grant 96.00651 .39 to S. A.) and As-sociazione Italiana Ricerca sul Cancro (grant to M. M.) is also acknowl-edged.2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Dipartimento diIstologia ed Embriologia Medica, via Scarpa 14, Universit#{224}“La Sapienza,”00161 Rome, Italy. Phone: 39-6-49766756; Fax: 39-6-4462854; E-mail:[email protected] it.
differentiation factors rather than the absence ofgrowth factors.
IntroductionTerminal differentiation of myogenic cells is regulated, atleast in vitro, by hormones and growth factors (henceforthcollectively referred to as hormones). Fibroblast growth fac-tor and transforming growth factor 13are potent inhibitors ofmyogenic differentiation (1-3), both of which act on relativelyearly steps of the differentiation process. Other factors suchas adrenocorticotropic hormone, platelet-derived growthfactor BB, -y-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, leukemia-inhibitory factor, and other cytokines have been reported toprimarily affect myoblast proliferation and have shown van-able effects on myogenic differentiation (4-6). IGF-I,3 IGF-Il,and insulin (IGFs) display unique properties, because theystimulate, rather than inhibit, myogenic differentiation in sev-eral myogenic cell lines and primary cultures of myoblastsand satellite cells (1 , 7, 8). One exception is represented bythe widely used C2 cell line, which does not seem to respondto exogenous lGFs, basically because C2 cells secrete largeamounts of these hormones (9). It is remarkable that the
differentiative action of the IGFs is accompanied by a mito-genic action (1). It has been proposed that the effects of IGFson myogenic cell differentiation and proliferation are medi-ated by the IGF-I receptor, which exhibits the binding spec-ificity IGF-l > IGF-Il > insulin (1, 10, ii).
Recently, AVP and related peptides have been shown toconstitute a new family of positive regulators of the terminaldifferentiation of myogenic cells (L6, mouse satellite cells;Refs. 12 and 13). By interacting with V1-type receptors, AVPcauses dose-dependent stimulation of the fusion of myo-blasts into myotubes and of the expression and accumula-tion of myogenin and Myf-5 products at both the RNA andprotein level. Other markers of myogenic differentiation, suchas myosin, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor function, andsubunit expression, were also found to be stimulated by AVPand related peptides (1 2, 13).
The mechanism by which IGFs and AVP stimulate myo-genesis is likely mediated by the enhancement of the tran-scniptional activity of MRF genes (12, 14). MRF proteins(myogenin, MyoD, Myf-5, and MRF4) share homology within
a basic helix-loop-helix motif that mediates dimenization andbinding to a consensus CANNTG sequence (E-box) presentin the promoter of many muscle-specific genes. Each of theMRF genes can activate myogenesis when expressed innonmyogenic cells (15, 16).
3 The abbreviations used are: IGF, insulin-like growth factor; AVP, arg8-vasopressin; CK, creatine kinase; FBS, fetal bovine serum; MRF, rnyo-genesis-regulatory factors; mAb, monoclonal antibody.
156 Hormonal Control of Myogenic Differentiation
The recent discovery of AVP and related peptides as myo-
genic differentiation factors makes it interesting to compare
their effects with those of the lGFs and to analyze their
respective mechanisms of action. Such a study is compli-cated by the presence of serum in the culture medium, whichcontains a number of more or less defined factors, including
mitogens, which, in general, repress the expression of the
differentiated phenotype. This is particularly true for myo-
genic cells in culture (1 , 8), whose differentiation is classicallyinduced by decreasing the concentration of serum in theculture medium. These reasons have prompted us to use a
chemically defined medium in which the proliferation anddifferentiation of myoblasts can be modulated by the addi-
tion of specific hormones, including AVP. In this study, we
report that under carefully controlled conditions, AVP is able
to induce a significant level of myogenic differentiation in the
absence of other factors, and that AVP and IGFs synergis-tically stimulate the expression of the differentiated pheno-
type in cultured myogenic cells.
ResultsMorphological DifferentiationEffects of AVP and Insulin. L6 cells were plated at 5000cells/cm2 in DMEM + 10% FBS and shifted 24 h after plating
to DMEM + 1 % BSA (serum-free medium). AVP (0.1 �u�i) orinsulin (0.1 �M) or both were added, and the cells were
cultured for several days. Under serum-free conditions, cells
slowly proliferated, regardless of the treatment, and by thethird day of culture in serum-free medium, the cultures that
had received AVP alone displayed the presence of multinu-cleated myotubes (Fig. 1B). No fusion was detectable incontrol cultures (Fig. 1A). Insulin-treated cells (Fig. iC) pre-sented a very modest percentage of fusion, whereas exten-
sive fusion (approximately 75%) was obtained in the pres-ence of both AVP and insulin (Fig. iD). Insulin-treatedcultures consisted mostly of mononucleated myoblasts, withrare, thin myotubes containing less than 6 nucleVfiber. Con-versely, in cultures treated with 0.1 �.tM AVP, frequent, ratherlarge myotubes containing an average of 12 nuclei/fiber werepresent. Larger myotubes (average, 23 nucleVfiber) formed incultures treated with both AVP and insulin. Parallel expeni-ments conducted with L5 cells yielded a superimposable
morphological pattern of differentiation. Calculation of the
percentage of fusion for both L6 and L5 cultures (Fig. iE)confirmed that a significant level of myogenic differentiation
of both cell lines was induced by AVP and potentiated by thesimultaneous presence of insulin in serum-free medium.
Evaluation of the total number of nuclei (unfused + fused) per
microscopic field (Fig. iF) did not suggest dramatic effects of
either hormone or of their combination on either L6 or L5 cellproliferation under these culture conditions.
Although cell lines such as L6 and L5 represent valid
models for the study of myogenesis, it was of interest to
verify the hormonal response of primary cultures of satellite
cells under the conditions of this study. The effect of AVP or
insulin or their combination on satellite cell differentiation in
serum-free medium was assessed by evaluating the percent-
age of myosin heavy chain-expressing cells after 72 h ofhormone treatment (see “Materials and Methods”). The re-
suIts (Fig. 2) indicate that AVP (0.1 �LM) stimulated myosinheavy chain accumulation to a higher extent than 0.1 �M
insulin, whereas maximal stimulation of myosin heavy chain
expression was induced by simultaneous treatment withboth hormones.
The time course of differentiation of L6 cell cultures treated
with 0.1 �.1.MAVP or 0.1 �M insulin or both in serum-freemedium is shown in Fig. 3A. The data indicate that AVP-treated cells underwent a rapid burst of fusion during thethird day of treatment and, by the end of the 4th day oftreatment, reached approximately 40% fusion. Conversely,no significant amount of fusion was detected in control cellsduring the same period, and a modest percentage of fusion
was measurable in insulin-treated cultures. The simultane-ous presence of AVP and insulin induced extensive fusion,
starting after the second day of hormone treatment and
reaching approximately 80% fusion by the end of the fourth
day. No significant change in the percentage of fusion ofcontrol or hormone-treated cultures occurred after the fourthday, up to the seventh day (data not shown). Analysis of totalnucleVmicroscopic field during the period examined mdi-cated no striking difference among the various culture con-ditions, confirming that none of the treatments significantlyaffected L6 cell proliferation in the absence of serum (Fig.3C). Comparison of the effects of AVP and insulin in theabsence and in the presence of FBS shows that in the lattercondition, AVP induced a higher degree of fusion than inserum-free medium (Fig. 3, B versus A); insulin promoted
extensive differentiation (at variance with its effect in serum-free medium), and control cells differentiated to a significant
degree. Furthermore, it may be noted that in the presence of5% FBS, hormone-induced L6 cell differentiation was aslower process than in the absence of serum. Serum-con-taming medium induced L6 cells to proliferate to a much
higher extent than in serum-free conditions (Fig. 3, D versusC). However, in the presence of 5% FBS, neither AVP norinsulin induced significant effects on cell number at the con-
centration used, in agreement with our previous data (1 2, 13).The dose dependency of the effect of AVP alone or in
combination with insulin in serum-free medium is reported in
Fig. 4A. A significant effect of AVP on cell fusion was evidentat a concentration of 0.1 nM, reaching a plateau at the highest
AVP concentrations used. A similar dose dependency, al-though on higher values of fusion, was measurable when a
fixed concentration of insulin (0.1 �M) was present along withthe various AVP concentrations (Fig. 4A). Both in the ab-
sence and in the presence of insulin, AVP stimulated L6-C5myoblast fusion with an ECso � 0.3 nM. A similar experimentwas conducted to investigate the insulin concentration de-pendency of L6 cell fusion in serum-free medium, both in theabsence and in the presence of a fixed concentration (0.1 p.r�i)
of AVP (Fig. 4B). In the presence of AVP, insulin significantlystimulated L6 cell fusion at concentrations �30 n�i, and
maximal stimulation of fusion occurred at insulin concentra-tions in the 0.1-3 �tM range. A modest but reproduciblestimulation of L6 cell differentiation occurred at the sameinsulin concentrations, also in the absence of AVP (Fig. 4B).Microscopic evaluation of total nuclei in the experimentalconditions reported for Fig. 4, A and B, did not indicate
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Cell Growth & Differentiation 157
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Fig. 1 . Morphological analysis of L6 and L5 cells cultured in serum-free medium. A-D, photomicrographs of L6 cultures at the third day in serum-freemedium (fourth day of culture) in the absence (A) or in the presence of0.1 �M AVP (B), 0.1 �tM insulin (C), and AVP and insulin (D). Similarly prepared culturesof L6 and L5 cells were microscopically counted, and the results were expressed as the percentage of fusion (E) and the total (unfused + fused)nucleVmicroscopic field (F).
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Fig. 2. Effect of AVP and insulin on the differentiation of mouse satellitecells in serum-free medium. Primary cultures of satellite cells were shiftedto serum-free medium and treated with 0.1 �M AVP and/or 0.1 �M insulinas indicated. After 72 h, the cells were fixed and subjected to immuno-cytochemical analysis using the anti-myosin heavy chain mAb MF2O.
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Fig. 3. Time course of the differentiation (percentage of fusion, A and B)and proliferation (nuclei/field, C and D) of L6 cells cultured in serum-freemedium (left panels) or in the presence of 5% FBS (right panels). Allcultures were seeded on day 0 at the same initial density (5000 ceIIs/cm�)in DMEM + 10% FBS and shifted 24 h later to either serum-free mediumc4 and C) or 5% FBS medium (B and D). #{149},control (no hormone addition);., 0.1 �M AVP; A, 0.1 j.tM insulin; V, AVP + insulin. The arrows indicate thetime of hormone addition.
0123456012345678
158 Hormonal Control of Myogenic Differentiation
significant effects of either hormone, alone or in combination,
on L6 cell proliferation at all concentrations tested (data not
shown), except for a modest increase (1 0-1 5%) in total
nuclei induced by insulin at 10 and 30 f.LM.
IGF-l and IGF-Il. In the experiments described, insulin
was used as an inexpensive and readily available alternative
to the physiological ligands IGF-I and IGF-Il (1). The dose-
dependent effect of these factors was investigated as shown
in Fig. 4, C and D, and compared with that of insulin. In the
presence of 0.1 .LM AVP, significant stimulation of cell fusion
was induced by IGF-I (Fig. 4C) and IGF-II (Fig. 4D) at con-
centrations of 1-1 0 n�. This effect reversed at higher IGF
concentrations, in agreement with previous data (1 7). It is to
be noted that the biphasic shape of the curves, more evident
for IGF-l and IGF-II than for insulin (Fig. 4B), was likely related
to the mitogenic effect of these factors at the highest con-
centrations (up to 2.5-fold stimulation of total nuclei at IGF-I
or IGF-II concentrations above 10 nM; data not shown).
The modest effect of the IGFs in serum-free medium (com-
pared to their effects in the presence of serum) could be
attributed to the lower densities attained by L6 cells in se-rum-free medium, such that even fusion-competent cells
were prevented from fusing. To verify this possibility, L6
cultures were set up at various initial densities up to four
times the density used in the experiments already described,
thus reaching cell densities similar or higher than those dis-
played by cultures maintained in serum-containing medium,
whose differentiation was strongly enhanced by IGFs. The
results obtained (data not shown) indicate that under fusion-
permissive conditions (e.g., in the presence of AVP ± IGFs),
a progressive acceleration of myoblast fusion occurred as
the initial seeding density of L6 cells was increased stepwise
from 2,500 to 20,000 cells/cm2; however, even at the highest
initial density, lGFs were unable to induce extensive fusion of
L6 cells in the absence of AVP.
Effect ofAVP and IGFs on Myosin Level and CKActivityTo further substantiate our findings, biochemical markers of
terminal myogenic differentiation were also analyzed. The
effect of AVP and IGFs on the accumulation of myosin in L6
cells grown in serum-free medium was investigated by im-
munoblot analysis using the anti-myosin heavy chain mAb
MF2O (Fig. 5A). After 3 days of culture in serum-free medium,
control cells (DMEM + 1 % BSA) did not display detectable
evidence of myosin heavy chain, whereas a strong signal
was obtained from 0.1 p.M AVP-treated cells. A weak positive
signal was induced by IGF-l (3 nM) and insulin (0.1 MM). Again,
the combination of AVP and any one of the IGFs induced
significant accumulation of myosin heavy chain (Fig. 5A).
The specific activity of CK, which was extremely low in
serum-free medium without hormone additions, was strongly
enhanced in the presence of 0.1 �LM AVP (Fig. 5B). In insulin-
treated cells, the specific activity of CK was also significantly
enhanced compared to that of controls (over 20-fold stimu-
lation), although we constantly found CK specific activityvalues lower than those in AVP-treated L6 cells. As already
noted for fusion, simultaneous addition of AVP and insulin
synergistically induced very high levels of CK activity (Fig.5B).
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60
40
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(IGF-l], nM (IGF-Il], nM
Fig. 4. Dependency of L6 differentiation (percentage of fusion) on theconcentration of AVP, lGFs, and their combinations in serum-free me-dium. L6 cells were seeded at 5000 cells/cm2 in DMEM + 10% FBS, andat 24 h, the cultures were shifted to serum-free medium, and the hor-mones were added. The cultures were fixed and stained on the fifth dayof culture. A, increasing concentrations of AVP without (0) or with (#{149})0.1,.�M insulin. B-D, increasing concentrations of insulin and IGF-l or IGF-llwithout (Lx) or with (A) 0.1 �M AVP, respectively.
B
160
�120
�80
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Fig. 5. Effect of AVP and/or IGFs on the accumulation of myosin and theCK activity in serum-free medium. A, immunoblot of extracts of L6 cellscultured for 3 days in the absence (Ctrl’) or in the presence of 0.1 �M AVP,0.1 �LM insulin, 3 nM IGF-l, 3 n�.i IGF-ll, or their combinations. MHC Std, amyosin standard run along with the experimental samples. B, CK-specificactivity of extracts of L6 cells cultured in serum-free medium in theabsence (Ctri’) or in the presence of 0.1 �M AVP, 0.1 f.LM insulin, or both.
Cell Growth & Differentiation 159
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Expression of the MRF Genes Myogenin and Myf-5Differentiation of L6 cells is accompanied by expression of
the MRF gene myogenin. The effects of the various treat-
ments on the steady-state level of the myogenin transcript
indicate a strong effect of AVP and a relatively modest effect
of IGF-I, insulin, and IGF-II (in order of potency), whereas the
maximal level of expression is evident in AVP + insulin-
treated cells (Fig. 6A). The time course of the accumulation ofthe myogenin transcript in control or 0.1 j.tM AVP-stimulated
cells is shown in Fig. 6B. The myogenin transcript was un-
detectable in cells grown for 24 h in DMEM + 10% FBS,
whereas a low level of myogenin mRNA was present in
control L6 cells at 1 , 2, and 3 days after shifting the culturesto serum-free medium. At the same times, a strong increase
in the level of myogenin mRNA was evident in AVP-treated
cultures. Comparison with the data obtained in the presence
of 5% FBS (1 2) confirmed that induction of the expression of
myogenin by AVP occurred much earlier in serum-free me-
dium (24 h) than in 5% FBS (48 h).
The presence and the subcellular localization of myogeninprotein was also investigated by immunofluorescence stain-
ing of L6 cells, using the myogenin-specific mAb F5D (Ref.
1 8; Fig. 7). After 3 days of culture in serum-free medium,
control cells displayed a very weak and diffuse signal. At the
same time, none of the IGFs induced a strong effect,
whereas a strong positive signal correctly localized in thenucleus was elicited in cells treated with AVP or with AVP
plus one of the lGFs (Fig. 7).
Myf-5 and MyoD are known to be expressed early in the
developing somite and to act upstream of myogenin (19).
Whereas MyoD is not expressed in L6 cells (12, 20), it is
interesting to investigate the hormonal regulation of Myf-5expression in L6 cells under the conditions of this study. As
shown in Fig. 6C, no expression of the Myf-5 gene product
was observed in L6 cells growing in proliferative medium
(10% FBS; Lane A), in agreement with our previous obser-
vations (1 2), whereas a very slight expression level was de-
tectable in L6 cells 1 8 h after shifting to serum-free medium
(Lane B). At the same culture time, AVP alone (Lane C), or in
combination with insulin (Lane E), IGF-I (Lane G), or IGF-II
(Lane I) strongly induced Myf-5 mRNA expression. Con-
versely, none of the IGFs alone (insulin, Lane 0; IGF-l, Lane
F; and IGF-II, Lane H) significantly stimulated the expression
of Myf-5 in the absence of serum.
A
rRNA
CtrI
0123
AVP
123
Fig. 6. Northern blot analysis of the expression of myogenin and Myf-5in L6 cells. A, L6 cell cultures, seeded as usual in DMEM + 10% FBS, wereshifted at 24 h to serum-free medium and cultured for an additional 72 hwithout (Ctr!) or with 0.1 �M AVP, 0.1 �tM insulin, AVP + insulin, 4 n�i IGF-l,and 4 n� IGF-ll. Hybridization of the blot with an rRNA probe was used forthe purpose of normalization. B, time course of the effect of 0.1 �M AVPon the expression of myogenin. Control cells at day 0 (24 h of culture inDMEM + 10% FBS) and at 1 , 2, and 3 days of culture in serum-freemedium are shown; 0.1 MM AVP-treated cells at 1 , 2, and 3 days ofhormone treatment in serum-free medium are shown. Ethidium bromidestaining was used to verify equal loading of the samples. C, L6 cells werecultured for 24 h in DMEM + 10% FBS (Lane A) and then shifted toserum-free medium, treated with hormones as indicated, and incubatedfor an additional 18 h (Lanes B-I). Lane B, control; Lane C, 0.1 �M AVP;Lane D, 0.1 �tM insulin; Lane E, AVP + insulin; Lane F, 3 n�.i IGF-l; Lane G,AVP + IGF-l; Lane H, 3 n�.i IGF-ll; Lane I, AVP + IGF-ll.
1&’�j Hormonal Control of Myogenic Differentiation
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DiscussionUntil recently, lGFs were considered “unique among growthfactors and hormones in that they stimulate, rather than
inhibit, myogenic differentiation” (1). Our recent discovery of
the positive role played by AVP in the differentiation of myo-
genic cells (12) opened the possibility that other factors, inaddition to IGFs, may positively regulate myogenesis. Our
present results indicate that AVP, but not IGFs, in the ab-
sence of other factors, significantly stimulates myogenic
differentiation.
We found that reproducibility of the effects of hormones in
our system depends on several factors. More or less com-
plex serum-free media were used by several groups for the
analysis of myogenic cell proliferation and differentiation (re-
viewed in Ref. 8). Using L6 and L5 cells, we found that in the
absence of other factors, myogenic differentiation was af-
fected by the particular preparation of BSA used. Indeed,
whereas one of the commercial preparations of BSA that we
tested behaved as the one we have used in this study, one
was toxic for our cells, and in the presence of two additional
commercial BSA preparations, the percentage of fusion was
12 and 18% under control conditions, 45 and 55% in the
presence of 0.1 LM AVP, and 30 and 34% in the presence of
0.1 j.tM insulin, respectively. We selected a commercial BSA
preparation that allowed minimal differentiation unless spe-
cific hormones were present. Furthermore, accurate removal
of serum when cells were shifted from 10% FBS medium to
serum-free medium seemed to be critical, particularly for the
reproducibility of the effect of IGFs. In fact, addition of as little
as 0.5% FBS to serum-free medium resulted in a significantincrement of the percentage of fusion in the presence of 0.1
MM insulin (an approximately 4-fold increase compared toserum-free medium, insulin-treated cultures; data not
shown).
Under these culture conditions, AVP-dependent differen-
tiation of L6 cells was lower than in the presence of FBS inabsolute terms (40% fusion versus over 60%) but was
strongly stimulated when compared to the control (less than
1 % fusion in serum-free controls and approximately 20% in5% FBS controls; Fig. 3). Our results on the effect of insulin
or IGF-I/IGF-II on L6, L5, and satellite cell differentiation are
unexpected in that: (a) neither IGF-I/IGF-II nor insulin stimu-lated differentiation to any major extent; and (b) they syner-
gistically activated myogenic differentiation in the presence
of AVP. These results were confirmed by measuring other
differentiation markers such as myosin heavy chain or CKactivity.
The effects of AVP and IGFs on myogenic terminal differ-
entiation parameters are similar to those observed when the
expression of Myf-5 and myogenin was investigated. Taken
together, these results suggest that the mechanism of action
of AVP involves the induction of the expression of these
regulatory genes. It is worth recalling that Myf-5 is known toact upstream of myogenin, and that its expression in L6 cells
declines when that of myogenin increases (21 , 22). Thesedata and the observation that the onset of differentiation in
the presence of AVP and insulin is faster than in the presence
of AVP alone (Fig. 3A) may help explain the relatively modest
effect of the combined treatment with AVP and IGF-I (corn-
pared to that with AVP alone) on the expression of Myf-5.
Some discrepancy seems to exist between our data andthose of Ewton et a!. (23). Using a serum-free medium very
similar to ours, they reported that both IGF-I and IGF-Il
Ctrl IGF-I IGF-lI Insulin
AVP AVP+IGF-l
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Cell Growth & Differentiation 161
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Fig. 7. lmmunofiuorescence analysis of the expression of myogenin in L6 cells. L6 cells, seeded and cultured as described, were treated for 3 days without(Ctr() or with the following hormones: 0.1 �M AVP; 4 n� IGF-l; 4 n� IGF-ll; and 0.1 �M insulin or their combinations.
stimulated myogenic differentiation in terms of both myotube
formation and OK activity. More recently, Engert et a!. (24)
have shown that IGF-I induces first proliferation and then
differentiation and/or hypertrophy of L6 cells cultured in se-
rum-free medium. In addition, it must be noted that they
obtained a significant level of fusion in control conditions
(serum-free medium). As already pointed out, one possible
factor that could explain these discrepancies is the origin of
the BSA used by these groups (see previous discussion).
Another possibility could be the incomplete removal of serum
when the cells are shifted from the serum-containing me-
dium (20% FBS medium; Ref. 24) to the serum-free medium.
This possibility is particularly relevant in light of our obser-
vation that as little as 0.5% FBS significantly increases the
effect of insulin on fusion. We have also observed that initial
plating densities above those examined in this study or pro-
longed culturing in serum-containing medium before shifting
the cultures to serum-free medium results in hormone effects
different from those reported in this study. All these possi-
bilities could explain the differences between our results and
those presented by the other groups.
The origin and the mechanism of action of the lGFs have
been extensively studied (reviewed in Ref. 25), and their rolein skeletal muscle development is basically not disputed.
Conversely, the physiological relevance of the effect of AVP
on myogenic cell differentiation (1 2, 26, 27) is not univocally
established. On one hand, several reports indicate an indeed
modest effect of AVP on adult muscle (28), and no primary
disorders of skeletal muscle are evident in the clinical con-
ditions characterized by either reduced or increased levels of
AVP. On the other hand, an unsuspected developmental role
for a hormone whose effects in the adult were well known
has been recently reported for endothelin-i (29), and high
levels of immunoreactive AVP were measured in extracts of
human embryonic skeletal muscle; its concentration de-
dined as gestational age increased (30). Furthermore, Hanley
eta!. (31) reported the presence of a vasopressin-like peptide
in the mammalian sympathetic nervous system, a finding
that may cast light on the question of the origin of AVP
(or a vasopressin-like peptide) during skeletal muscle
development.
It is commonly thought that myogenic cells differentiate
spontaneously unless they are exposed to sufficientamounts of growth factors; the presence of such factors
induces myogenic cells to proliferate and represses the ex-
pression of the myogenic phenotype. By establishing real
control conditions, our study, on the contrary, supports the
view that terminal differentiation of at least some myogenic
cell culture models (such as those used in this study, which
do not secrete large amounts of differentiation factors) de-
pends on the presence of specific differentiation signals
rather than the absence of proliferative signals.
In conclusion, by using carefully controlled culture condi-
tions and measuring parameters such as fusion, accumula-
tion of myosin, CK activity, Myf-5, and myogenin expression,
we have consistently found that IGFs and AVP represent
families of differentiation factors whose synergistic actions
induce maximal myogenic differentiation. These two families
of myogenic factors have distinct receptors and distinct sig-
naling pathways. Research is in progress in our laboratory to
elucidate the level and the molecular mechanism of the syn-
ergism between AVP and lGFs in regulating the expression of
the myogenic phenotype.
Materials and MethodsSynthetic AVP and related peptides, bovine insulin, CK assay kit, Tn-Reagent, and other reagents were purchased from Sigma Chemical Co.
(St. Louis, MO). IGF-l and IGF-ll were purchased from Chemicon(Temecula, CA) and from Intergen (Purchase, NY). Quick-Hyb Northernblot hybridization solution was obtained from Stratagene (Heidelberg,
Germany). Fatty acid-free BSA (Boehringer Mannheim) was selected bycomparing BSA from different commercial sources, on the basis that nosigns of toxicity appeared even after long-term culture of L6 cells, and no
162 Hormonal Control of Myogenic Differentiation
fusion could be detected in the control conditions. The anti-myosin heavy
chain mAb MF2O (32) was a kind gift of Dr. D. Fishman (Cornell University,New York, NY). The anti-myogenin Ab F5D (18) was kindly provided by Dr.
W. E. Wright (University of Texas, Dallas, TX).Cell Cultures. Subcloning and characterization of L6 rat myogenic
cells (33) was reported previously (26). Cells of the subclone CS (L6-C5),a clone that had shown significant differentiation ability when culturedunder appropriate conditions (26), were used throughout this study. Thecells were routinely seeded at the density of 5000 cells/cm2 (unlessotherwise indicated) in DMEM supplemented with 100 units/mI penicillin,100 �g/ml streptomycin, and 10% heat-inactivated FBS. Twenty-four h
after plating, cuitures were extensively washed with DMEM and shifted toserum-free medium consisting of DMEM supplemented with BSA, with or
without other additions. Media were changed every 3 days, as appropri-
ate. Preliminary experiments performed with a medium composed ofDMEM supplemented with BSA allowed us to asses the minimal concen-tration (1 %) of BSA compatible with survival and good morphology of the
cells. Furthermore, it was found that BSA preparations obtained from
different commercial sources were widely different from one another whendifferentiation of L6-C5 cells was morphologically evaluated, both in the
absence and in the presence of hormones (see “Results”).
Rat L5 myogenic cells were routinely cultured in F14 medium supple-mented with 10% FBS (34). For serum-free medium experiments, 15 cellswere cultured as described above for L6 cells, except that gelatin-coateddishes were used.
Primary cultures of satellite cells were prepared from young adult CD1
mice as reported previously (12). After 48 h of cuiture, the proliferationmedium (DMEM supplemented with 20% horse serum and 5% chickembryo extract) was substituted with the serum-free medium described
above, and hormones were added as appropriate.Measurement of Myoblast Fusion and Growth. May Grunwald-
Giemsa-stained cultures were evaluated for cell fusion. Cells were con-sidered fused only if cytoplasmic continuity and at least three nuclei werepresent in each myotube. Greater than 10 randomly selected fields andgreater than 300 total nuclei were counted for each sample. The ratiobetween the number of nuclei in myotubes versus the total number ofnuclei per microscopic field was expressed as the percentage of fusion.Each experimental point represented in the graphs is the mean ± SD of
the counts obtained from four to nine independent samples obtained in atleast two separate experiments.
CK Assay. Cells were homogenized in 30 m�a HEPES and 1 m�i EDTA(pH 7.2), and the 20,000 x g supernatant was used to measure CK activity
according to Szasz et a!. (35). Protein content of cell extracts was meas-ured as described previously (36).
Immunochemistry. Myogenin expression was analyzed in cuitured
cells after fixation in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS and permeabilization in0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS. The monolayers were washed in 1% BSA inPBS and incubated overnight at room temperature with the undiluted
supernatant of F5D hybridoma cells (18). After extensive washing with 1%
BSA in PBS, the cells were incubated for 1 h at room temperature withfluorescein-conjugated goat antimouse immunoglobulmn (Cappel Labora-tories; diluted 1:50; Ref. 18).
Sarcomeric myosin expression was determined by Western blot anal-ysis using the MF2O mAb, and detection was performed by the enhancedchemiluminescence method (Amersham) according to the manufacturer’sinstructions. The same mAb was used for the immunocytochemical stain-ing of myosin heavy chain in primary satellite cell cultures. The reactionwas developed as reported previously (1 2), using a sheep antimouse
immunoglobulin, horseradish peroxidase-linked antibody obtained fromAmersham (Milan, Italy).
RNA Preparation and Northern Blot Analysis. Total RNA was iso-
lated from the cells by the Tri-Reagent procedure as indicated by themanufacturer. Equal amounts of total RNA (30 �g) were separated byelectrophoresis in 0.66 M formaldehyde-i .2% agarose slab gel, trans-ferred to Nytran membranes (Schleicher & Shuell, Hayward, CA) by cap-illary blotting. and cross-linked to the blots by UV irradiation (37). Otherprocedures were as described in Ref. 12, except that Quick-Hyb was usedas prehybridization and hybridization buffer. The rat myogenin probe(1 500 bp), kindly provided by Dr. W. E. Wright, and the human Myf-5
probe (1250 bp; Ref. 20) were the EcoRl restriction fragments of therespective cDNA clones. Equal loading of the samples was verified eitherby ethidium bromide staining of the gels (37) or by hybridization of the
blots with a ribosomal 18S RNA (rRNA) probe (American Type CultureCollection, Rockville, MD).
AcknowledgmentsWe thank G. Cossu and M. Fiszman for critical reading of the manuscript
and F. Naro and A. Di Noi for helpful advice and discussion. Mouse
satellite cells were kindly provided by M. Coletta and L Capece.
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