Paula M Fraczek’s research while affiliated with Concordia University Ann Arbor and other places

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Publications (14)


Vitamin A-Retinoic Acid Contributes to Muscle Stem Cell andMitochondrial Function Loss in Old Age
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2025

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25 Reads

JCI Insight

Paula M Fraczek

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Pamela Duran

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Benjamin A Yang

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[...]

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Carlos A Aguilar

Adult stem cells decline in number and function in old age and identifying factors that can delay or revert age-associated adult stem cell dysfunction are vital for maintaining healthy lifespan. Here we show that Vitamin A, a micronutrient that is derived from diet and metabolized into retinoic acid, acts as an antioxidant and transcriptional regulator in muscle stem cells. We first show that obstruction of dietary Vitamin A in young animals drives mitochondrial and cell cycle dysfunction in muscle stem cells that mimics old age. Next, we pharmacologically targeted retinoic acid signaling in myoblasts and aged muscle stem cells ex vivo and in vivo and observed reductions in oxidative damage, enhanced mitochondrial function, and improved maintenance of quiescence through fatty acid oxidation. We next detected the receptor for vitamin A derived retinol, stimulated by retinoic acid 6 or Stra6, was diminished with muscle stem cell activation and in old age. To understand the relevance of Stra6 loss, we knocked down Stra6 and observed an accumulation of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species, as well as changes in mitochondrial morphology and respiration. These results demonstrate that Vitamin A regulates mitochondria and metabolism in muscle stem cells and highlight a unique mechanism connecting stem cell function with vitamin intake.

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Maresin 1 repletion improves muscle regeneration after volumetric muscle loss

December 2023

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83 Reads

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8 Citations

eLife

The acute traumatic or surgical loss of skeletal muscle, known as volumetric muscle loss (VML), is a devastating type of injury that results in exacerbated and persistent inflammation followed by fibrosis. The mechanisms that mediate the magnitude and duration of the inflammatory response and ensuing fibrosis after VML remain understudied and as such, the development of regenerative therapies has been limited. To address this need, we profiled how lipid mediators, which are potent regulators of the immune response after injury, varied with VML injuries that heal or result in fibrosis. We observed that non-healing VML injuries displayed increased pro-inflammatory eicosanoids and a lack of pro-resolving lipid mediators. Treatment of VML with a pro-resolving lipid mediator synthesized from docosahexaenoic acid, called Maresin 1, ameliorated fibrosis through reduction of neutrophils and macrophages and enhanced recovery of muscle strength. These results expand our knowledge of the dysregulated immune response that develops after VML and identify a novel immuno-regenerative therapeutic modality in Maresin 1.


Figure 5. Early Reprogramming Cells with Varying Nucleo-Scaffold Composition Transition Along Distinct Reprogramming Trajectories. A) Schematic of transduction of fibroblasts from three conditions with reprogramming vector and isolation 7 days followed by profiling with single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq). B) UMAP embeddings colored by Leiden clustering and each sample. C) UMAP embeddings showing the expression of pluripotency (top row) and fibroblast (bottom row) genes. D) Partition-based graph abstraction (PAGA) analysis of inferred trajectories in early reprogramming cells. Distinct trajectories emerging from the root node (Cluster 3) are shown. E) Reconstructing gene expression changes of mesenchymal (MSC) and fibrogenic (Fibro.) fates transitioning towards distinct reprogramming outcomes along PAGA paths as a function of diffusion pseudotime. Gene expression is normalized and scaled to unit values across each row within each path. F) Split violin plot of differentially expressed genes between control and LMNA knockdown fibroblasts in Cluster 4. Genes upregulated in each condition are marked at the bottom.
Manipulation of the nucleoscaffold potentiates cellular reprogramming kinetics

March 2023

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71 Reads

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1 Citation

Somatic cell fate is an outcome set by the activities of specific transcription factors and the chromatin landscape and is maintained by gene silencing of alternate cell fates through physical interactions with the nuclear scaffold. Here, we evaluate the role of the nuclear scaffold as a guardian of cell fate in human fibroblasts by comparing the effects of transient loss (knockdown) and mutation (progeria) of functional Lamin A/C, a core component of the nuclear scaffold. We observed that Lamin A/C deficiency or mutation disrupts nuclear morphology, heterochromatin levels, and increases access to DNA in lamina-associated domains. Changes in Lamin A/C were also found to impact the mechanical properties of the nucleus when measured by a microfluidic cellular squeezing device. We also show that transient loss of Lamin A/C accelerates the kinetics of cellular reprogramming to pluripotency through opening of previously silenced heterochromatin domains while genetic mutation of Lamin A/C into progerin induces a senescent phenotype that inhibits the induction of reprogramming genes. Our results highlight the physical role of the nuclear scaffold in safeguarding cellular fate.


Global changes in 3D genome organization are largely static during muscle stem cell aging. (a) Schematic of experiment. (b) Normalized contact heatmaps of young (lower triangle) versus aged (upper triangle) MuSCs for chr1 at 250 kb resolution. A zoomed‐in region is shown at 5 kb resolution. The maximum color map value for pixels is shown in the bottom left corner of each heatmap. (c) Representative A/B compartment signal showing changes between young and aged MuSCs at 100 kb resolution. Compartment switches are highlighted in green. (d) Quantification of 100 kb bins that switch compartments (Young to Aged). (e) Distribution of ATAC‐seq peaks in A and B compartments. (f) Gene expression in log2(TPM) per A/B compartment in young and aged MuSCs. All statistical comparisons are unpaired Mann–Whitney U‐tests.
Muscle stem cells exhibit age‐dependent changes in topologically associated domains (TADs) and chromatin loops. (a) Aggregate contact heatmaps at 40 kb resolution over a 5 Mb region centered on contact domains (TADs). (b) Distributions of ATAC‐seq and H3K4me3 signals (RPKM) across a 1 Mb region centered on TAD boundaries. K‐means clustering (4 clusters) of the A/B compartment signal classified the boundaries by whether they fell within A/B compartments or divided compartment switching regions. (c) Representative contact heatmaps log1p(observed/expected), TAD separation score tracks, A/B compartments (A, blue; B, gray), TAD domains, TAD boundaries (vertical lines and triangles), chromatin loops, ATAC‐seq and H3K4me3 fold‐change signal tracks, and gene expression in RPKM for young and aged MuSCs. TAD domains are colored by TAD rearrangement type. (d) Distribution of TAD boundaries gained in aged and lost in young across A/B compartment groups. (e) Gene expression (mean ± SEM) in log2(TPM) against binned intra‐TAD connectivity percentiles. (f) Aggregate Peak Analysis (APA) of chromatin loops. (g) Diagram and (h) quantitation of chromatin loop classifications. (i) Volcano plot of inferred binding activity of expressed (TPM >1) transcription factors (TFs) in sites of accessible chromatin at loop anchors. The top 5% differentially bound TFs are colored in red (aged) and blue (young).
Single‐cell multi‐omic analysis of gene regulatory dynamics during muscle stem cell aging. (a) Schematic of single‐cell ATAC‐seq (scATAC‐seq) dataset generation and integration with single‐cell RNA‐seq (scRNA‐seq) datasets. (b) scATAC UMAP embeddings colored by cell type and age. (c) scATAC UMAP embeddings colored by Pax7 gene activity scores and linked gene expression from integrated scRNA datasets. The identified MuSC cluster was reclustered and colored by age. (d) Row‐scaled heatmaps of statistically significant peak‐to‐gene linkages. Each row represents either chromatin accessibility at a distal site (left) or expression of the target gene (right). The columns represent cell aggregates colored by age. K‐means clustering (5 clusters) reveals distinct regulatory networks between young and aged MuSCs. Heatmaps of representative Reactome pathways enriched in each cluster are shown to the right. (e) scATAC signal tracks, peaks, and peak‐to‐gene linkages for Hes1 colored by correlation scores. Cis‐co‐accessibility of distal sites involved in these linkages are shown below colored by co‐accessibility scores. TADs encompassing the locus are shown at the bottom. Expression from integrated single cell RNA datasets are shown as violin plots. (f) and (g) Histograms of the number of CCANs constrained within individual (f) loops and (g) TADs.
Three-dimensional chromatin re-organization during muscle stem cell aging

February 2023

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116 Reads

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13 Citations

Age-related skeletal muscle atrophy or sarcopenia is a significant societal problem that is becoming amplified as the world's population continues to increase. The regeneration of damaged skeletal muscle is mediated by muscle stem cells, but in old age muscle stem cells become functionally attenuated. The molecular mechanisms that govern muscle stem cell aging encompass changes across multiple regulatory layers and are integrated by the three-dimensional organization of the genome. To quantitatively understand how hierarchical chromatin architecture changes during muscle stem cell aging, we generated 3D chromatin conformation maps (Hi-C) and integrated these datasets with multi-omic (chromatin accessibility and transcriptome) profiles from bulk populations and single cells. We observed that muscle stem cells display static behavior at global scales of chromatin organization during aging and extensive rewiring of local contacts at finer scales that were associated with variations in transcription factor binding and aberrant gene expression. These data provide insights into genome topology as a regulator of molecular function in stem cell aging.


Three-dimensional chromatin re-organization during muscle stem cell aging

September 2022

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48 Reads

Age-related skeletal muscle atrophy or sarcopenia is a significant societal problem that is becoming amplified as the world's population continues to increase. A critical contributor to sarcopenia is the loss in the number and function of muscle stem cells, which maintain tissue homeostasis and regenerate damage. The molecular mechanisms that govern muscle stem cell aging encompass changes across multiple regulatory layers and are integrated by the three-dimensional organization of the genome. To quantitatively understand how hierarchical chromatin architecture changes during muscle stem cell aging, we generated 3D chromatin conformation maps (Hi-C) and integrated these datasets with multi-omic (chromatin accessibility and transcriptome) profiles from bulk populations and single cells. We observed that muscle stem cells display static behavior at global scales of chromatin organization during aging and extensive rewiring of local contacts at finer scales that were associated with variations in transcription factor binding and aberrant gene expression. These data provide insights into genome topology as a regulator of molecular function in stem cell aging.


Neutrophil and natural killer cell imbalances prevent muscle stem cell–mediated regeneration following murine volumetric muscle loss

April 2022

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144 Reads

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42 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Significance Skeletal muscle is one of the largest tissues in the body and can regenerate when damaged through a population of resident muscle stem cells. A type of muscle trauma called volumetric muscle loss overwhelms the regenerative capacity of muscle stem cells and engenders fibrotic supplantation. A comparison of muscle injuries resulting in regeneration or fibrosis revealed that intercellular communication between neutrophils and natural killer cells impacts muscle stem cell-mediated repair. Perturbation of neutrophil–natural killer cell interactions resulted in a variation of healing outcomes and suggested that immunomodulatory interventions can be effective to prevent aberrant healing outcomes.


Figure 1. Loss of SESTRIN1,2 induces hyperactivation of mTORC1 signaling in MuSCs (A) Representative in situ immunohistochemical images of whole quadriceps muscle sections from wild-type (WT, top) and SESTRIN1,2 À/À (SKO, bottom) mice stained for DAPI (blue), PAX7 (red), laminin (green), and phospho-S6 (pS6, white), a marker of mTORC1 activation. Scale bars, 100 mm. Magnified images show PAX7 + cells for each condition. Arrows mark PAX7 + cells. Scale bars, 25 mm. (B) Quantification of pS6 + (plain) and pS6 À (stippled) PAX7 + cells as a percentage of all nuclei in whole WT and SKO quadriceps sections (WT, n = 3 mice; SKO, n = 3 mice). Statistical comparisons are two-sided Mann-Whitney U tests. (C) Quantification of Ki67 + (plain) and Ki67 À (stippled) PAX7 + cells in WT and SKO quadriceps muscle sections (WT, n = 4 mice; SKO, n = 4 mice). Statistical comparisons are two-sided Mann-Whitney U tests. (D) Quantification of mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) from CellRox, MitoTracker, and Ki67 in WT and SKO MuSCs fixed immediately after isolation. Statistical comparisons are two-sided, unpaired Student's t tests. All data are shown as mean ± SEM. ***p < 0.001, ****p < 0.0001. See also Figures S1 and S2.
Sestrins regulate muscle stem cell metabolic homeostasis

August 2021

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75 Reads

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20 Citations

Stem Cell Reports

The health and homeostasis of skeletal muscle are preserved by a population of tissue-resident muscle stem cells (MuSCs) that maintain a state of mitotic and metabolic quiescence in adult tissues. The capacity of MuSCs to preserve the quiescent state declines with aging and metabolic insults, promoting premature activation and stem cell exhaustion. Sestrins are a class of stress-inducible proteins that act as antioxidants and inhibit the activation of the mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) signaling complex. Despite these pivotal roles, the role of Sestrins has not been explored in adult stem cells. We show that SESTRIN1,2 loss results in hyperactivation of the mTORC1 complex, increased propensity to enter the cell cycle, and shifts in metabolic flux. Aged SESTRIN1,2 knockout mice exhibited loss of MuSCs and a reduced ability to regenerate injured muscle. These findings demonstrate that Sestrins help maintain metabolic pathways in MuSCs that protect quiescence against aging.


Murine muscle stem cell response to perturbations of the neuromuscular junction are attenuated with aging

July 2021

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246 Reads

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25 Citations

eLife

During aging and neuromuscular diseases, there is a progressive loss of skeletal muscle volume and function impacting mobility and quality of life. Muscle loss is often associated with denervation and a loss of resident muscle stem cells (satellite cells or MuSCs), however, the relationship between MuSCs and innervation has not been established. Herein, we administered severe neuromuscular trauma to a transgenic murine model that permits MuSC lineage tracing. We show that a subset of MuSCs specifically engraft in a position proximal to the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), the synapse between myofibers and motor neurons, in healthy young adult muscles. In aging and in a mouse model of neuromuscular degeneration (Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase knockout – Sod1 -/- ), this localized engraftment behavior was reduced. Genetic rescue of motor neurons in Sod1 -/- mice reestablished integrity of the NMJ in a manner akin to young muscle and partially restored MuSC ability to engraft into positions proximal to the NMJ. Using single cell RNA-sequencing of MuSCs isolated from aged muscle, we demonstrate that a subset of MuSCs are molecularly distinguishable from MuSCs responding to myofiber injury and share similarity to synaptic myonuclei. Collectively, these data reveal unique features of MuSCs that respond to synaptic perturbations caused by aging and other stressors.


Neutrophil and natural killer cell imbalances prevent muscle stem cell mediated regeneration following murine volumetric muscle loss

July 2021

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33 Reads

Volumetric muscle loss (VML) overwhelms the innate regenerative capacity of mammalian skeletal muscle (SkM), leading to numerous disabilities and reduced quality of life. Immune cells are critical responders to muscle injury and guide tissue resident stem cell and progenitor mediated myogenic repair. However, how immune cell infiltration and inter-cellular communication networks with muscle stem cells are altered following VML and drive pathological outcomes remains underexplored. Herein, we contrast the cellular and molecular mechanisms of VML injuries that result in fibrotic degeneration or regeneration of SkM. Following degenerative VML injuries, we observe heightened infiltration of natural killer (NK) cells as well as persistence of neutrophils beyond two weeks post injury. Functional validation of NK cells revealed an antagonistic role on neutrophil accumulation in part via inducing apoptosis and CCR1 mediated chemotaxis. The persistent infiltration of neutrophils in degenerative VML injuries was found to contribute to impairments in muscle stem cell regenerative function, which was also attenuated by transforming growth factor beta 1 ( TGFβ1 ). Blocking TGFβ signaling reduced neutrophil accumulation and fibrosis, as well as improved muscle specific force. Collectively, these results enhance our understanding of immune cell-stem cell crosstalk that drives regenerative dysfunction and provide further insight into possible avenues for fibrotic therapy exploration. SINGLE SENTENCE SUMMARY Comparison of muscle injuries resulting in regeneration or fibrosis reveals inter-cellular communication between neutrophils and natural killer cells impacts muscle stem cell mediated repair.


Sestrins regulate age-induced deterioration of muscle stem cell homeostasis

December 2020

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35 Reads

The health and homeostasis of skeletal muscle is preserved by a population of tissue resident stem cells called satellite cells. Young healthy satellite cells maintain a state of quiescence, but aging or metabolic insults results in reduced capacity to prevent premature activation and stem cell exhaustion. As such, understanding genes and pathways that protect satellite cell maintenance of quiescence are needed. Sestrins are a class of stress-inducible proteins that act as antioxidants and inhibit the activation of the mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) signaling complex. Despite these pivotal roles, the role of Sestrins has not been explored in adult stem cells. Herein, we show that Sestrin1,2 loss results in hyperactivation of the mTORC1 complex, increased propensity to enter the cell cycle and shifts in metabolic flux. Aging of Sestrin1,2 knockout mice demonstrated a loss of MuSCs and reduced ability to regenerate. These findings demonstrate Sestrins function to help maintain MuSC metabolism that supports quiescence and against aging. Highlights Sestrin deficiency alters mTORC1 signaling in muscle stem cells (MuSCs). In young mice, Sestrins are dispensable for regenerative responses of MuSCs. Sestrin deficiency accelerates age-dependent loss and dysfunction of MuSCs.


Citations (8)


... ; https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.05. 13.653766 doi: bioRxiv preprint Recent evidence demonstrated by us and independent groups have used liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) profiling to show that many potential LOX pathway metabolites increase locally following acute skeletal muscle injury [21][22][23][24][25][26] . These novel findings are consistent with earlier reports showing that exercise-induced skeletal muscle damage also transiently increased many LOX metabolites in human blood 27,28 . ...

Reference:

Leukocyte-type 12/15-lipoxygenase is essential for timely inflammation-resolution and effective tissue regeneration following skeletal muscle injury
Maresin 1 repletion improves muscle regeneration after volumetric muscle loss

eLife

... Indeed, the 3D organization of the genome and, subsequently, the epigenetic state and transcriptional activity of the genes involved in cell fate decisions at least partially depends on the interaction of chromatin with lamins and the overall nuclear (and genomic) morphology. Moreover, in human fibroblast manipulations that affect nuclear scaffolds (such as the transient loss of the core component of the nuclear scaffold, Lamin A/C) resulted in the opening of the previously closed chromatin domains and, thus, facilitated the cellular reprogramming to pluripotency [107]. ...

Manipulation of the nucleoscaffold potentiates cellular reprogramming kinetics

... For example, ChromaFold resolved chromatin interactions in alpha and beta cells within the pancreatic islet cell populations derived from the scATAC and bulk Hi-C data of non-diabetic islet donors. In this sample, it visually depicted interactions at alpha and beta cell marker (54). In this study, the authors compared the higher-order chromatin contact maps of young and aged mice muscle stem cells (MuSCs) using bulk Hi-C and scATAC-seq. ...

Three-dimensional chromatin re-organization during muscle stem cell aging

... Additionally, cellular senescence-a state of irreversible cell cycle arrest-accumulates in aging tissues and contributes to muscle degeneration. 97 To address these challenges, various strategies for skeletal muscle tissue engineering have been developed, including the use of stem cells, biomaterials, and biomolecules. 94 Understanding the mechanisms of muscle regeneration and the aging of stem cells is essential for developing effective therapies. ...

Neutrophil and natural killer cell imbalances prevent muscle stem cell–mediated regeneration following murine volumetric muscle loss

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

... To further probe how diet-induced changes in gene expression impacted metabolic flux, we applied genome-scale metabolic modeling to our RNA-Seq data (32). The metabolic model predicted VA-free diet increased flux through L-lactate dehydrogenases and retinol dehydrogenases that contribute to NAD + /NADH balance and nucleotide synthesis as well as sense changes in available lipids and steroids (Fig. 2F, Supp. ...

Sestrins regulate muscle stem cell metabolic homeostasis

Stem Cell Reports

... To test whether Myc expression in MuSCs would also impair muscle growth under conditions where the proliferative burden on MuSCs is lower, we crushed the femoral branch of the sciatic nerve, which causes complete denervation of the lower hindlimb, followed by reinnervation at around 14 days and subsequent muscle regrowth 34 , approaching completion after~6 weeks. Loss of innervation stimulates MuSCs to activate and proliferate 35 , presumably to support muscle regrowth and NMJ remodeling in the event of reinnervation 36 . Furthermore, to determine whether Pax7-MycKO MuSCs fuse with muscle fibers after a denervation/re-innervation event, we compared Pax7-eGFP and Pax7-MycKO mice, where all muscle fibers that incorporate MuSCs will become eGFP positive (Fig. 5A). ...

Murine muscle stem cell response to perturbations of the neuromuscular junction are attenuated with aging

eLife

... An integrative genomic approach profiling MuSCs from young and aged animals before and after injury has revealed age-associated changes in chromatin accessibility, along with a global decline in H3K9me3 marks and reduced expression of SUV39H1 partners. These findings suggest that, much like in muscular dystrophies and cancer, the loss of SUV39H1-mediated repression in aged MuSCs may contribute to impaired regenerative capacity [147]. ...

Dissecting Murine Muscle Stem Cell Aging through Regeneration Using Integrative Genomic Analysis

Cell Reports

... This enables us, for the first time, to examine changes within all major subsets of mononuclear cells during regeneration of human skeletal muscle. In general, the deconvolution analysis revealed a striking coherence between our data and the typical cellular patterns observed in chemically induced muscle injury in mouse models 31,32 . Analysis of spatial spots containing cell-specific gene transcripts showed that monocyte/macrophage transcripts exert the largest response to injury, reaching a maximum at 2 dpi (Fig. 2B). ...

Single-Cell Analysis of the Muscle Stem Cell Hierarchy Identifies Heterotypic Communication Signals Involved in Skeletal Muscle Regeneration

Cell Reports