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Emanuela
Gussoni, PhD
Assistant
Professor of Pediatrics
Harvard Medical School/Children's Hospital
Department of Pediatrics (Genetics)
MRRC Project(s)
P01 NS40828-01
Gene Expression
in Normal and Diseased Muscle during Development
PI, Project
4: Gene Expression in and Therapeutic Application of Muscle Stem Cells
The broad objectives
of this project are to characterize human muscle stem cells and evaluate
their potential as gene vectors for the therapy of muscle disorders. The
aims of these studies are to: 1) purify muscle stem cells from human skeletal
muscle using the vital DNA dye Hoechst 33342 (H0342) and the fluorescence-activated
cell sorter (FACS); 2) use gene chip and gene array technologies to characterize
the repertoire of genes expressed by human muscle stem cells and compare
this repertoire to expression patterns in more differentiated myoblasts;
3) analyze and characterize expressed genes that are specific to muscle
stem cells to define possible pathways of differentiation/commitment of
skeletal muscle stem cells; 4) use the information derived from gene array
technology to optimize different media compositions that will promote
the propagation of human muscle stem cells in vitro; 5) test whether
human muscle stem cells can differentiate into multiple cell types in
vivo by introducing them into NOD /SCID mice and assessing their ability
to reach host skeletal muscles from the circulation. These studies
are essential to further our basic knowledge of the existence of muscle
stem cells in humans. The identification of candidate genes that are uniquely
expressed by human muscle stem cells will help in understanding how muscle
stem cells differ from more committed myoblasts, and why muscle stem cells
(as shown in our previous mouse studies) can differentiate into bone marrow
cells. Further, exploring methods to propagate muscle stem cells will
be crucial for obtaining large numbers of cells for characterization experiments
as well as for in vivo studies. These in vivo studies are
aimed to test whether human muscle stem cells can be safely used as vehicles
to systemically deliver genes to skeletal muscle. The hope is to be able
to extend the practical use of muscle stem cells to the development of
a therapy for human muscle disorders.
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