Are cultured human myotubes far from home?
Aas, Vigdis; Bakke, Siril Skaret; Feng, Yuan Zeng; Kase, Eili Tranheim; Jensen, Jørgen; Bajpeyi, Sudip; Thoresen, G. Hege; Rustan, Arild
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Original article is available at www.springerlink.com
View/ Open
Date
2013-12Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Original version
Aas, V., Bakke, S. S., Feng, Y. Z., Kase, E. T., Jensen, J., Bajpeyi, S., ... & Rustan, A. C. (2013). Are cultured human myotubes far from home?. Cell and tissue research, 354(3), 671-682. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00441-013-1655-1Abstract
Satellite cells can be isolated from skeletal muscle biopsies, activated to proliferating myoblasts and differentiated into multinuclear myotubes in culture. These cell cultures represent a model system for intact human skeletal muscle and can be modulated ex vivo. The advantages of this system are that the most relevant genetic background is available for the investigation of human disease (as opposed to rodent cell cultures), the extracellular environment can be precisely controlled and the cells are not immortalized, thereby offering the possibility of studying innate characteristics of the donor. Limitations in differentiation status (fiber type) of the cells and energy metabolism can be improved by proper treatment, such as electrical pulse stimulation to mimic exercise. This review focuses on the way that human myotubes can be employed as a tool for studying metabolism in skeletal muscles, with special attention to changes in muscle energy metabolism in obesity and type 2 diabetes.