Division of Life Science
Molecular Regulation of Quiescence and Early Activation in Muscle Stem Cells
In vertebrates, adult muscle satellite cells (i.e., muscle stem cells, or MuSC) are absolutely indispensable for injury-induced muscle regeneration. In uninjured adult muscles, most MuSC reside in a quiescent state (a unique cellular “hibernating” state with minimum cellular activities and energy requirement). Upon muscle injury, these quiescent MuSC (QSC) are activated, re-enter the cell cycle to proliferate, and then differentiate and fuse to repair the damaged muscles. Interestingly, it takes much longer time (~36-48 h vs 8-10 h for cycling cells to go through subsequent cell cycles) for QSC to enter the first cell cycle, which is absolutely crucial and tightly regulated. Dysregulation during this period prevent QSC from reentering the cell cycle and result in severe muscle regeneration defects. It remains unclear how the transitions from QSC to cycling myoblasts are regulated.
Here, using different mouse models we generated that display defects in early activation of adult MuSC, we propose to perform comprehensive and systematic molecular, cellular, and mouse-based studies in order to understand how adult QSCs are regulated to become cycling myoblasts upon muscle injury. Through such systematic and in-depth mechanistic studies, we hope that we will gain better understanding of the molecular, epigenetic, and signaling mechanisms that regulate quiescence and early activation of adult MuSC. The results from our studies will be beneficial to future development of MuSC-based regenerative medicine for the treatment of various muscle diseases including muscle atrophy (e.g., sarcopenia) in aged people.
- Professor, Division of Life Science
- Director of Laboratory Animal Facility
- Director of Center for Stem Cell Research
- Director of HKUST-SIAT Joint Lab for Brain Science
- Associate Director of Biotechnology Research Institute
- Associate Director of Center for Tissue Regeneration and Engineering
科研发现
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科大突破性发现罕见肿瘤细胞「间谍」 揭示不为人知的癌细胞
香港科技大学(科大)研究人员研发了一种可为冷冻和新鲜细胞组织样本同时进行单细胞DNA和RNA测序的新技术,更利用这方法识别出伪装为正常细胞的罕见脑肿瘤细胞「间谍」。是次发现为一些最复杂和罕见肿瘤的研究带来突破,并为未来的药物靶标发现开辟新方向。
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解构秀丽隐杆线虫pri-miRNA加工复合体的分子机制
小分子核糖核酸(microRNAs,以下简称miRNAs)是一种在动物和人类基因调控中发挥重要作用的小型核糖核酸(RNA),一直令许多科学家为之着迷。在生物学和医学中,一項非常重要的研究范畴就是miRNA如何控制和调节基因表达,因为科学界一般相信,这个课题对理解细胞突变有重大作用,对於治疗癌症和其他与细胞突变有关的疾病,至为关键。