Muscle repair gets spooky help

Stem cells use empty tunnels, called ghost fibers, to rebuild damaged tissue in mice

Ghost fibers and stem cells

GHOSTS IN THE MACHINE  Muscle stem cells (white) crawl through ghost fibers (red) to heal damage in mouse muscle. Ghost fibers are empty tubes of connective tissue that bundle uninjured muscle cells into fibers.

M. Webster/Carnegie Institution for Science

SAN DIEGO — Friendly ghosts help muscles heal after injury.

Connective tissue sheaths that bundle muscle cells together leave behind hollow fibers when muscles are injured, Micah Webster of the Carnegie Institution for Science in Baltimore and colleagues discovered. Muscle-repairing stem cells build new tissue from inside those empty tunnels, known as ghost fibers, Webster reported December 13 at the annual meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology.

Researchers previously knew that stem cells can heal muscle, but how stem cells integrate new cells into muscle fibers has been a mystery. Webster and colleagues used a special microscopy technique to watch stem cells in live mice as the cells fixed muscles damaged by snake venom. Stem cells from undamaged parts of the muscle fiber crawled back and forth through the ghostly part of the fibers and spaced themselves out evenly. Stem cells replicated themselves to reconstruct each muscle fiber inside its ghostly shell the researchers found. Stem cells didn’t move from one ghost fiber to another. 

The finding suggests that researchers will need to create artificial ghost fibers to repair injuries in which chunks of muscles are lost, such as in soldiers hit by explosives, Webster said. The researchers also reported the results online December 10 in Cell Stem Cell.

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