Immunoneutralization of TGFβ1 Improves Skeletal Muscle Regeneration: Effects on Myoblast Differentiation and Glycosaminoglycan Content

When injured by crushing, the repair of the slow-twitch soleus rat muscle, unlike the fast-twitch EDL, is associated with fibrosis. As TGFβ1, whose activity can be controlled by glycosaminoglycans (GAG), plays a major role in fibrosis, we hypothesized that levels of TGFβ1 and GAG contents could account for this differential quality of regeneration. Here we show that the regeneration of the soleus was accompanied by elevated and more sustained TGFβ1 level than in the EDL. Neutralization of TGFβ1 effects by antibodies to TGFβ1 or its receptor TGFβ-R1 improved muscle repair, especially of the soleus muscle, increased in vitro growth of myoblasts, and accelerated their differentiation. These processes were accompanied by alterations of GAG contents. These results indicate that the control of TGFβ1 activity is important to improve regeneration of injured muscle and accelerate myoblast differentiation, in part through changes in GAG composition of muscle cell environment.


Introduction
Skeletal muscle has a great ability to regenerate in response to injury or disease [1,2]. The regeneration process is attributed to mononucleated cells found in adult skeletal muscles located between the basal lamina and the plasmalemma of muscle fibers. Recent work has shown that these so-called satellite cells are a heterogeneous population comprising stem cells and committed progenitor cells (reviewed in [3][4][5][6]). Stimulated by damage to the muscle fiber, satellite cells are activated to enter the cell cycle; they fuse either together or with myofibers in order to restore muscle architecture and function with more or less efficiency [2,7,8].
Most muscles are a mosaic of fast and slow fibers [9,10]. Due to their composition, the slow-twitch muscle soleus and the fast-twitch muscle Extensor digitorum longus (EDLs) are widely used as models because they are composed in majority or almost totally of slow or fast type fibers reciprocally, depending on animal species. Studies of the regenerative response of these two muscles to injury, induced, for example, by a microlesion [11] or an anesthetic injection [12,13], have found differences in the way these two types of muscle get repaired. This is particularly true in a whole muscle crush model in rat where the soleus muscle undergoes fibrosis in contrast to the EDL muscle that regenerates correctly [14].
Intrinsic properties of satellite cells involved in muscle repair might contribute to the differential repair processes of fast and slow skeletal muscles in rats. Several studies, including our previous works [13,[15][16][17], have reported that myoblasts isolated from fast or slow muscles and grown in vitro display some differential growth and differentiation properties. The differences of myoblasts from fast and slow muscles are maintained independently of the phenotypic transition of muscle fibers induced by an adequate chronic electrical stimulation.
Cytokine and growth factor activities could be proposed to account for the differential features of regenerating slow 2 International Journal of Cell Biology and fast skeletal muscles. Among growth factors known to modulate the regeneration process, those belonging to the transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) family seem to play specific roles in muscle development and after injury [18]. Works in the 1980s and after have shown that TGFβ negatively regulates muscle cell proliferation and differentiation [19]. This cytokine can also influence muscle fiber type patterning in regenerating muscles after injury [20]. In addition, TGFβ family members are well known to play a major role in fibrosis development and scar formation since they stimulate extracellular matrix (ECM) production, modulate the expression of ECMdegrading enzymes and proteinase inhibitors [21,22]. In the C2C12 myoblast cell line, TGFβ1 can stimulate its own synthesis in an autocrine manner and triggers cells to differentiate into myofibroblasts in injured muscle [23]. TGFβ1 is also connected with fibrosis during congenital muscular dystrophy and Duchenne's dystrophy [24][25][26]. Thus, this cytokine initiates a fibrotic cascade in skeletal muscles that needs to be hindered [24,27,28] and reduction of TGFβ1 expression or activity would appear promising for improving muscle repair, as suggested by earlier studies [25,29].
Differences in matrix component environment could also be evoked to account for muscle regeneration ability in particular in the case of the whole muscle crush model. Muscle environment has a profound effect on the regenerative capacity of resident muscle precursor cells and implanted cells [30,31]. Among ECM components and membrane-associated components that contribute to cellular environment, proteoglycans (PGs) have been implicated in numerous physiological and pathological processes such as enzyme regulation, cellular adhesion, growth, migration, and differentiation [32,33]. The effect of PG is mainly due to the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) moiety of these molecules, principally the heparan sulphate (HS) and the dermatan sulphate/chondroitine sulphate (CS/DS) (see [34,35] for reviews). In particular, HS plays a prominent role in skeletal muscle development and physiology [36]. We have demonstrated that HS is increased during differentiating myoblast [37]. ECM composes a reservoir for growth factors including TGFβ [38,39]. Among PGs that belong to muscle environment, some of them such as decorin, biglycan, and betaglycan have been implicated in the regulation of TGFβ bioavailability in skeletal muscle, modulating myogenesis progression [26,40]. It is generally believed that TGFβ signaling is initiated by its binding to the proteoglycan betaglycan and then to the TGFβ receptors type II and I heterodimer from where a signal is transduced [41][42][43]. Although TGFβ is known to bind to betaglycan core protein [44], modifications in GAG moiety of this PG modulate TGFβ binding to TGFβ receptors and modulate downstream signalling [45]. Thus, the acquaintance with GAG content and composition after tissue injury may be of particular importance in the understanding of processes involved in tissue repair. The balance between secreted cytokines such as TGFβ and GAG network may represent a homeostatic mechanism aimed at controlling the skeletal muscle repair process.
The main hypothesis presently explored was that TGFβ1 level could at least partially account for the differential regeneration abilities of soleus and EDL muscles through modulating myoblast differentiation and GAG cellular environment. An impairment of TGFβ activity was achieved using injection of anti-TGFβ1 or anti-TGFβ receptor I (TβRI) antibodies into crushed soleus or EDL muscles in vivo or by treating primary cultures of myoblasts isolated from both muscles with these antibodies. The effects of these treatments were analyzed on muscle regeneration and myoblast differentiation. Attention was also focused on GAGs in the environment of satellite cells and in regenerating muscles. Taken together, results suggested that TGFβ1 and GAGs interplay in regulating muscle repair and myoblast differentiation.

Materials.
Dulbecco modified essential medium (DMEM), foetal bovine serum (FBS), and horse serum were from Gibco, Invitrogen Life technology. Primary and secondary antibodies were from Santa Cruz Biotech. PVDF membrane and immunoblotting detection reagents were from Roche. Reagents for ELISA assay were from R&D, BD Biosciences. Other reagents were purchased from Sigma.

Surgical Procedure and Regeneration Experiments.
All procedures involving animals were approved by the Ethics Committee in the Care and use of Animals (192/2002). The regeneration of soleus and EDL muscles was induced in 3-month-old male Wistar rats according to [14]. In brief, rats were anaesthetized with an intraperitoneal injection of ketamine (6 mg/kg) and xylasine (60 mg/kg) mixture and the muscle was exposed. Tendons were kept in place but motor nerve was cut at the muscle surface. Then muscle was crushed from tendon to tendon with a Pean haemostatic forceps. The muscle was then put back in its bed. After skin closure, animals were allowed to recover and were returned to their cage with food and drink at libitum. This procedure ensured a good reproducibility of the regeneration process and induced an exhaustive myolysis of all fibers thus validating further biochemical analysis on injured muscles. Antibodies against TGFβ1 or TGFβ-receptor I (TβRI) were injected just after crush (100 μg per muscle in 50 μL) into the muscles referred to as treated muscles. At different days after injury, animals were euthanasized in CO 2 and the regenerating muscles of each animal were removed and weighed. Muscles were then either directly used for biochemical investigations or freezed in isopentane precooled in liquid nitrogen, then stored at −80 • C pending histological or biochemical studies. Three rats were used for each muscle type and the experiment was repeated 3 times. Contralateral intact muscles were also taken for comparison to injured muscles.

Histological Analysis of Regenerated Muscle.
Transversal cross-sections of control or treated soleus and EDL muscles were cut (10 μm thick) on a cryostat (Microm, Germany) International Journal of Cell Biology 3 and stained with the Gomori Trichrome technique for histological examination.

Myoblast Primary Cultures.
Satellite cells were dissociated with pronase from soleus or EDL muscles of 3 months old Wistar male rats, as previously described [16]. Cells were seeded (2 000 cells/cm 2 ) on dishes coated with 0.1% gelatin and grown continuously in DMEM containing 10% fetal bovine serum and 10% horse serum in 5% CO 2 at 37 • C. At days 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, or 14 cellular growth was measured by counting the cells after trypsinization medium was collected and cells were homogenized for immunoblots or for GAG measurements. Histological aspects of the cultures were assessed by Hoffman contrast observations (Nikon microscope). Some cultures were stained with the Giemsa-May-Grünwald technique for myotube analysis and fusion index determination. The size of myotubes was evaluated by counting the number of nuclei found in each myotube. The fusion index represents the percentage of nuclei found in myotubes divided by the total number of nuclei in the culture. These counts were performed on 10 representative microscopic fields of each plate belonging to several cultures.

Cell Treatments.
In some experiments, myoblast cultures were treated either with anti-TGFβ1 or anti-TβRI antibodies. According to preliminary experiments performed to determine the optimum concentration and frequency of treatment with antibodies to be used, soleus or EDL myoblast cultures were treated at day 4 and then every 2 days along with medium change with 1 μg/mL anti-TGFβ1 antibody. Either 1.5 μg/mL or 1.0 μg/mL of anti-TβRI was used on soleus and EDL myoblasts, respectively.
2.6. Immunoblot Analysis. Experiments were performed for control or treated regenerated muscles and cell cultures. Regenerated muscle in vivo or cells grown in vitro were lysed in ice-cold buffer containing 20 mM Tris-HCl, 5 mM EGTA, 5 mM EDTA, 150 mM KCL, 1% Nonidet, 0.5% sodium deoxycholate, 0.01% leupeptin, 0.5 mM PMSF, and 10 mM β-mercaptoethanol at pH 7.5. All operations were performed on ice. Protein concentration was quantitatively determined using the Bradford Biorad Protein assay. Twenty μg of protein in Laemmli sample buffer were loaded onto a sodium dodecyl sulfate 10% acrylamide gel, transferred to PVDF membrane, and incubated with polyclonal antibodies raised against TGFβ1 or TβRI or Fibronectin at final dilution 1 : 200 (overnight, 4 • C). The blots were then incubated with peroxidase-conjugated antirabbit antibodies (1 : 2000, 1.5 hours, room temperature). The loading of gels was routinely controlled using anti-α-tubuline [46]. The immunoblots were visualized by chemiluminescence and exposed to film (Kodak). An image of the gel was captured using the GelDoc2000 scanner and protein bands were analyzed using Quantity One program (BIORAD) and graphed using Excel. Each experiment was performed 3 times and the results were expressed in percentage as mean ± SE.

ELISA Measurement of TGFβ1
. Immunoassays were performed with extracts from control soleus or EDL regenerating muscles. Muscles were homogenized in lysis buffer; protein concentrations were determined using the Bradford Biorad Assay. One hundred μL of samples containing 20 μg of total protein were assayed according to the manufacturer procedure. Duplicate measurements for each standard and samples were performed.

Sulphated GAG Measurement.
Total sulphated GAGs were measured as described in Barbosa et al. 2003 [47]. In brief, homogenates from cellular layer or muscle fragments were performed in phosphate buffer (K 2 HPO 4 , 50 mM, pH 8.0). Cellular extracts were then treated with 50 μg/mL proteinase K in phosphate buffer at 56 • C overnight. Heating the preparation 10 minutes at 90 • C then inactivating proteinase K, at this step, the amount of DNA in aliquot samples was determined by 4,6-diamino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) assay using salmon sperm DNA as standard [48]. Digested tissues were then treated with DNAse (Qiagen, France) used at 7.5 units/100 mg fresh weight overnight at 37 • C in order to eliminate interfering DNA. These preparations were used for sulphated GAG quantitation.
Total sulphated GAGs and HS GAG species were quantitated using the method based on dimethylmethylene blue co-precipitation with GAGs according to [47]. HS was quantitated after treatment of total GAG preparations with chondroïtinase ABC (20 mU/100 μL, 2 hours, Sigma).

Statistical Analysis.
Each experiment was repeated at least three times. Data are expressed as mean ± standard error (SE). Statistical significance was determined using a Student's t-test (GraphPad Software, San Diego, Calif, USA).

Differential Characteristics of Regenerating Soleus and EDL Muscles after Crush.
Histology of soleus and EDL muscles in the course of crush-induced regeneration is shown on Figure 1. After crush, a complete muscle fiber myolysis occurs in both muscles, that is, almost achieved at day 3 ( Figure 1 Control pictures). At day 7, numerous small fibers can be observed in both soleus and EDL muscles. However, whereas the EDL muscle was regenerated correctly and showed a well-structured muscle at days 14 and 64 after crush, the soleus showed heterogeneous fiber size at day 14 after crush. Regeneration did not progress further and fibrosis, already obvious at day 14, remained at day 64. Both types of muscles also differed by muscle regulatory factor (MRF) protein patterns. Indeed, MRFs were activated earlier in regenerating EDL than in soleus muscle. In both muscles, levels of MyoD and myogenin were successively increased. However, in soleus muscle, MyoD peaked at days 5-7 and myogenin at day 14, whereas in EDL muscles these MRFs peaked earlier, MyoD being at its maximum at day 3 and myogenin at day 7 ( Figure 2). Immunoblot analysis of TGFβ1 performed with extracts prepared from regenerating muscles (Figure 3(a)) revealed Figure 1: Histological aspects of regenerating soleus and EDL muscles. Transversal cryosections of intact muscles, control muscles, or muscles that were injected with anti-TGFβ1 antibody were performed at the indicated days after crush. Sections (10 μm) were stained with Gomori Trichrome as described in the Materials and Methods Section. Bars: 50 μm. that in soleus muscle TGFβ1 increased at day 1 after crush and remained at a high level up to 14 days. At day 64 after crush, TGFβ1 level was still slightly higher than in intact muscle. In EDL regenerating muscle, TGFβ1 amount increased at day 1 then diminished to the control level as early as day 7 after crush. Measurements of TGFβ1 by ELISA technique correlated with immunoblotting evaluation at least for the first 7 days after crush. (Figure 3(b)). The amount of TGFβ1 protein in intact soleus muscle was 4.19 pg ± 0.39. In this muscle, it increased 3 to 4 times at days 1 and 3 after crush to reach more than 21 pg per muscle at day 3; then, it decreased at day 7, when it still remained about twice higher than in control muscle. In the EDL intact muscle, TGFβ1 protein amount measured by ELISA was 3.24 pg ± 0.44. It increased to about 12 pg/muscle at day 1, then regularly decreased reaching the control level at day 7.
Thus, the pattern of TGFβ1 protein level whatever its origin (inflammatory cells or muscle cells) is different in soleus and EDL regenerating muscles. It remained at a higher level a much longer time in soleus than in EDL muscle.
International Journal of Cell Biology TGFβ1 protein amount measured by ELISA during the first week after crush in untreated regenerating muscles (control). Levels of TGFβ1 are shown as pg per muscle fresh weight. In intact soleus and EDL muscles 4.19 pg per muscle and 3.24 pg per muscle were found, respectively. The data represent mean ± SE of 3 independent determinations each of them including 3 animals. All values found in regenerating muscles were statistically different from intact muscles (P < .05) except for EDL day 7. (c) Representative Immunoblots of TGFβ1 in extracts from muscles injected just after crush with anti-TGFβ1 antibody and taken at the indicated days after crush.

TGFβ1 Antibody Improves Skeletal Muscle Regeneration.
Anti-TGFβ1 antibodies were injected into the injured muscle after crush to further validate the hypothesis that sustained TGFβ1 action would explain the presence of fibrosis in regenerating soleus. The presence of anti-TGFβ1 improved the structure of regenerating muscles (on Figure 1 see "anti-TGFβ1" compared to "controls"). Muscle regeneration improvement was especially remarkable in the case of soleus muscle. The diameters of fibers were larger and more homogenous in size. Treatment of muscles of both types with anti-TGFβ1 antibody allowed the restoration of muscular architecture similar to an intact muscle at day 64. It was not possible to quantitate TGFβ1 by ELISA technique in the anti-TGFβ1-treated muscles because of the presence of antibodies in the extract that would interfere with the test but immunoblot showed that the treatment of soleus or EDL muscles with anti-TGFβ1 antibody reduced the amount of TGFβ1 protein compared to untreated International Journal of Cell Biology regenerating muscles (Figure 3(c)). Interestingly, TGFβ1 protein level was diminished in the soleus muscle as soon as day 7 after crush in treated muscles. The reduction of TGFβ1 protein level in the presence of anti-TGFβ1 correlated with improvement of the muscle morphology shown by histology (Figure 1). To further evaluate the impact of TGFβ1 impairment on fibrosis in the muscle tissue, fibronectin protein expression was examined in both muscle types in the course of regeneration. This protein of the extracellular matrix is indeed widely used as a marker of tissue fibrosis, in particular in skeletal muscle where it is part of endomysium and perimysium [49]. The level of fibronectin in untreated soleus regenerating muscle (control) at day 1 after crush was about 2-3 times higher than in an intact muscle taken as a reference (100%) (Figure 4). Then, fibronectin protein level further increased in regenerating soleus muscle, reaching its highest level at day 14 (644%) after crush. At this time, fibrosis was clearly visible on histological pictures. In EDL muscles which spontaneously regenerate correctly without any treatment after injury in this model, fibronectin protein increased about 3 times at day 1 after crush but decreased to almost intact level at day 15 after crush. Treatment of EDL regenerating muscle with anti-TGFβ1 antibody slightly decreased the level of fibronectin protein. In contrast, in soleus muscle anti-TGFβ1 antibody highly decreased the level of fibronectin protein especially at day 14 after crush. These results illustrated a beneficial role of anti-TGFβ1 to reduce fibrosis during soleus muscle regeneration.

Properties of Myoblasts Isolated from Soleus and EDL Muscles.
Immunohistological studies have shown that TGFβ1 was found around muscle fibers in intact muscles, some cells at the periphery of fibers being highly labelled. In regenerating muscles, the antibody against TGFβ1 decorated small cellular structures, presumably activated satellite cells or small myotubes (not shown). This suggested that the TGFβ1 found in regenerating muscles, especially in soleus type muscle, might be attributable not only to fibroblasts or infiltrating inflammatory cells [50] but also to resident myogenic cells. Therefore, we investigated whether differences between fast and slow type muscles, especially as concerns TGFβ1 protein level, could result, at least in part, from intrinsic properties of myoblast cells.
Patterns of proliferation and differentiation of myoblasts isolated from soleus and EDL muscles were established at first. Morphological aspects of these cultures are shown on Figure 5. Under our culture conditions, where a high concentration of serum was permanently used (10% FBS and 10% horse serum), the number of cells began to increase after the 4th day following plating. It increased continuously up to day 10 in soleus ( Figure 6(a)) and EDL (Figure 6(c)) cell cultures when it reached a plateau. However, this plateau in soleus cultures at day 10 was about 50% higher than in EDL cultures. Spontaneous differentiation in cultures did not begin prior to the 6th day after plating. In soleus myoblast control cultures (Figures 6(a) and 6(b)), the first myotubes appeared at day 6, thus earlier than in the EDL myoblast cultures (Figures 6(c) and 6(d)), and the myotubes formed 8 International Journal of Cell Biology were bigger than in the EDL cells. For instance, at day 10, myotubes containing more than 20 nuclei were seen in soleus cell cultures whereas the biggest myotubes seen in EDL cell cultures contained only up to 14 nuclei. But finally, at day 14 after plating, fusion index reached about 55% in both types of myoblast cultures. This showed that soleus myoblasts differentiated more precociously than EDL myoblasts.

Impairment of TGFβ1 Activity by Anti-TGFβ1 or Anti-TGFβ Receptor I (TβRI) Antibodies Increased Proliferation and
Accelerated Myoblast Fusion. Treatments of cultures from day 4 with anti-TGFβ resulted in an increased myoblast growth and accelerated myotube formation in myoblasts isolated from both soleus (Figures 6(a) and 6(b)) or EDL muscles (Figures 6(c) and 6(d)). The stimulation of proliferation were more striking in the case of soleus myoblast cultures especially between days 6 and 10, but finally the total number of cells was not increased at day 14 compared to untreated controls. In EDL cell cultures, the rate of proliferation was highly increased after day 8 (4 days of treatment), and finally at day 14, there were about 60% more cells in treated cultures. This suggested that TGFβ1 behaves as an inhibitor of myoblast growth and that impairment of its activity increases cell proliferation.
Compared to control, anti-TGFβ1 antibody also highly accelerated myoblast fusion as shown on Figure 5. The index of fusion ( Figure 6) was increased in both soleus and EDL myoblasts and reached about 65 to 70% at day 14 (Figures 6(a) and 6(c)). In anti-TGFβ1 antibody-treated cultures, fusion of soleus myoblasts began earlier than in EDL cell cultures, and the sizes of myotubes was more important (Figures 6(b) and 6(d)).
Treatments of myoblasts with anti-TβRI antibody also increased cell growth, but this increase was delayed by about 2 days compared to anti-TGFβ1 antibody treatment. Anti-TβRI prolonged cell growth in both soleus and EDL myoblast cultures after day 10 following plating. Interestingly, anti-TβRI accelerated myoblast fusion and increased the size of myotubes even more efficiently than anti-TGFβ1 ( Figure 6).
Taken together, these results have shown that neutralization of TGFβ1 activity or signalling through TGFβRI impairment induced an increase in both proliferation and fusion of myoblasts. Since the effects of neutralization of TGFβ activity on proliferation were kinetically different in soleus and EDL myoblasts cultures, this suggested also that these cultures differed in the pattern of expression of TGFβ1 in the course of differentiation.

Patterns of TGFβ1 and TβRI Protein Expression during In Vitro Differentiation of Soleus and EDL Derived Myoblasts.
Immunoblot analyses of TGFβ1 protein content were performed from day 4 of culture in both soleus and EDL derived myoblasts. The amount of TGFβ1 found at day 4 was taken as reference (100%). In untreated (control) soleus myoblast cultures (Figure 7(a)), the level of TGFβ1 protein in cellular extracts increased to peak at day 10 after plating. In contrast, in untreated EDL myoblast cultures TGFβ1 protein level slightly decreased at day 8 compared to day 4, and then it increased to reach a level about 160% of the day 4 level at day 14 of culture. Treatments with anti-TGFβ1 antibody seemed to attenuate the variations of TGFβ1 amounts in the course of differentiation, in both soleus and EDL myoblast cultures during (Figure 7(a)).
The patterns of TβR1 expression in soleus or EDL control myoblast cultures also differed slightly (Figure 7(b)). Whereas it did not change markedly during the 2 weeks of culturing in control EDL cells, it increased slightly at day 14 in control soleus cell cultures. Treatment of myoblasts with anti-TβRI antibody resulted in modification of TβRI protein level that dropped of about 30% at days 8 and 10 in soleus cultures before increasing again. In EDL treated cultures, the TβRI receptor level dropped at day 12 after plating, thus 4 days later than in soleus cell cultures.
These results have shown that myoblasts from soleus and EDL muscles express TGFβ1 in vitro and display a differential pattern of TGFβ1 and TβRI protein expressions when differentiating under identical cell culture conditions. Changes in patterns of these proteins were all delayed by about 2 to 4 days in EDL cultures compared to soleus cultures.

The GAG Pattern Change during Soleus and EDL Muscle
Regeneration. GAGs are known to contribute to changes in cell behavior by modifying the storage and availability of bioactive molecules such as TGFβ. Thus the pattern of GAGs at the beginning of regenerating soleus and EDL muscle was established (Figure 8). In both muscles, sulphated GAG content increased compared to intact muscles during the first two weeks of the repair process. Whereas it reached a plateau at day 7 after crush in EDL muscle, it increased continuously in soleus regenerating muscle up to day 14. Treatment of muscles with the anti-TGFβ1 antibody highly reduced the amounts of GAGs in both muscles from day 5 after crush, especially in EDL. When crushed muscles were injected with anti-TβRI antibody, GAG amounts in both muscles were reduced almost as efficiently as in the presence of anti-TGFβ1 (Figure 8). Thus a prolonged presence of TGFβ1 in muscle was associated with sustained GAG production, especially in soleus muscle. This is in support of the hypothesis that TGFβ1 activity alters GAG amount during muscle regeneration as in number of other studies.
Skeletal muscles are composed of many different cell species, including inflammatory cells, each of them diversely contributing to the production of GAGs. It was therefore of interest to analyze the GAGs produced by the cells responsible for muscle repair, that is, myoblasts and to examine the effect of TGFβ1 neutralization on these GAGs.

Changes in GAG Pattern during Differentiation of Soleus and EDL Derived
Myoblasts. The pattern of total GAG content at cellular level slightly differed in Soleus and EDL derived myoblasts. In soleus myoblasts, the produced GAGs increased from day 4 to peak when myotubes were formed at day 8 and reached 3.5 μg of GAG/μg DNA then, they decreased slightly (Figure 9(a)). The GAG peak in EDL derived myoblasts occurred 2 days later than in soleus Soleus Control Anti TGFβ1 A n t i T βRI

EDL Control
Anti TGFβ1 A n t i T βRI    cells and was at its maximum at day 10 when it reached 2.5 μg GAG/μg DNA (Figure 9(a)). In fact, GAGs produced were almost exclusively found in culture medium when myoblasts proliferate (day 4). GAGs in culture medium then diminished when cells differentiated (Figure 9(b)), more drastically in the case of soleus cell culture. The amount of HS species proportionally increased when cells of both types achieved their differentiation, especially in soleus cell cultures (Figure 9(c)). Treatment of cells with anti-TGFβ1 altered the total GAG content. In both types of myoblasts, it induced a sustained level of total GAGs at the cellular level between days 10 and 14 of culture in differentiating cells when GAGs diminished in controls. At the same time, anti-TGFβ1 highly reduced the amount of GAGs found in culture medium (Figure 9(b)). Anti-TβRI had similar effects than anti-TGFβ1 on GAG distribution between cells and medium (not shown). The treatment of cells with anti-TGFβ1 further increased the proportion of HS compared to controls in both cultures (Figure 9(c)).
These results have shown that soleus and EDL derived myoblasts synthesize GAGs that accumulate at the cellular level when myoblasts fuse into myotubes. This accumulation took place earlier in soleus than in EDL muscle cell cultures but occurred before the peak of TGFβ1 in both muscles. The antibodies that impaired TGFβ1 action accelerated myotube formation. It also accelerated the accumulation of GAGs at cellular level where the augmentation of HS species was emphasized.

Discussion
Slow and fast twitch muscles, soleus, and EDL, respectively, displayed differential aspects in the course of their regeneration after crush. As previously observed [14], whereas EDL muscle regenerates properly, the soleus muscle displays fibrosis. The hypothesis that was presently explored was that the differential regeneration ability of the fast and slow muscles was associated to differential expressions of TGFβ1 in these muscles and in myoblasts derived from them. The first observation of this study was indeed that soleus and EDL regenerating muscles displayed different patterns of TGFβ1 protein amounts as shown by immunoblot and ELISA techniques. After an initial rise of TGFβ1 at day 1 after crush, the soleus showed a sustained level of this protein over the 14 days after injury, but the amount of TGFβ1 found in EDL diminished at day 7. Immunoneutralization of TGFβ1 action by using antibodies improved muscle regeneration as shown by histological analysis. Correlatively, anti-TGFβ1 treatment also anticipated a drop in the level of this cytokine detected by immunoblotting, especially in soleus regenerating muscles.
In many studies, TGFβ1 appears as a key component that regulates a fibrotic loop in muscle cells. In physiological condition, it is commonly admitted that synthesis of extracellular matrix molecules such as fibronectin increases during repair of tissue but decreases with the formation of normal parenchyma. In our crush induced regeneration model, EDL muscle which regenerates correctly, displayed such a transient increase in TGFβ1 and fibronectin. That was not the case in regenerating soleus muscle where sustained TGFβ1 and fibronectin protein levels were correlated to a poor quality of regeneration. Li at al. have shown that TGFβ1 triggers a transformation of myoblasts to fibroblasts [23]. In addition, Brandan's group have recently shown that PG such as decorin and biglycan, which are known to regulate TGFβ1 bioavailability, might originate at least partially from fibroblasts in vivo [49]. The improvement of the quality of regenerated soleus muscles observed here in the presence of anti-TGFβ1 might come from the fact that this loop was minimized by treatment with the antibodies that impaired TGFβ1 effect.
The possibility that differentiating myoblasts in regenerating muscle might participate to the TGFβ1 production had to be evaluated. To our knowledge, the production of TGFβ1 by myoblasts isolated from soleus and EDL muscles and grown in primary cultures has never been established. It has been shown here that both cultures expressed TGFβ1 but the patterns of TGFβ1 expression differed between the two types of cultures. When TGFβ1 protein increased in soleus cell cultures at day 10, it increased later (days [12][13][14] in EDL cell cultures. In addition, myoblasts derived from these muscles differ in proliferating and differentiating properties, thus corroborating previous findings [16]. It was presently shown that in soleus cell cultures some myoblasts fused into myotubes earlier than in EDL cultures, while other myoblasts remained proliferating a longer time than in EDL cultures. Conflicting reports have been made on the role of TGFβ in skeletal myoblast differentiation and in vivo myogenesis [51]. Although many cells respond equally to different isoforms, it has been shown that TGFβ1 isoform totally inhibits the terminal differentiation of the Sol 8 cell line [52]. In the present study it was seen that TGFβ1 produced by cells did not prevent myoblast to fuse, whatever was its (c) Analysis of GAG species in EDL and Soleus derived myoblasts. HS, expressed as % of total GAG, was determined after a chondroïtinase ABC treatment of the total GAG samples. Two determinations, that did not differ by more than 10%, were used in this experiment. amount. However, although cell treatment with neutralizing antibodies did not alter extensively the apparent amount of TGFβ1 protein detected by immuno electrophoresis, it has an important effect on cell behavior. It seemed to induce an appropriate state in cells that triggers them to fuse more precociously and intensively. The anti-TβRI antibody was even more efficient than the anti-TGFβ1 in triggering myoblast fusion. The presence of anti-TβRI antibody reduced for several days, in both cultures, the amount of receptor, suggestive of an autocrine loop between TGFβ1 and its receptor. Precocious fusions observed here in treated cultures could not be due to an increasing cell density that would enhance the probability of fusion between neighbouring myoblasts. In fact, at similarly low cellular densities, some cultures presented numerous myotubes and others not. Rather, these precocious fusions reflected intrinsic cellular properties. As suggested by a study of Brandan's group [53], the increase in fusion associated to TGFβ1 impairment by an appropriate antibody could be linked to an enhanced ability of myoblasts to migrate. Other factors might be involved in regulating the cytokine activity. TGFβ family members are known to have affinity to proteoglycans. Most of the studies concerning the role of proteoglycans on the regulation of TGFβ activity have focused on the expression of their core protein components. But a growing body of evidence has attributed to sulphated glycosaminoglycans, a major importance in regulating growth factor, cytokine, and chemiokine effects including TGFβ1. In the present study, the amount of sulphated GAGs were increased in regenerating muscles within the first 2 weeks post-injury, especially in the soleus. These GAGs might contribute to control TGFβ1 activity. Part of these GAGs were produced by activated satellite cells. It is shown here that soleus and EDL derived myoblasts produced increasing amounts of GAGs in vitro when cells began to fuse. At the same time, the amount of GAGs in the culture medium decreased. The peak of GAGs occurred two days earlier in soleus myoblast cultures compared to EDL myoblast cultures. This finding could be correlated with the observation that soleus myoblasts fused earlier than EDL myoblasts. It must be emphasized that the maximum of GAG production at cellular level occurred before the maximum of TGFβ1 protein in both culture types. These GAGs might participate to the control of TGFβ1 signaling.
We previously have shown that an increasing amount of GAGs, especially of the HS species, could be associated to differentiating myoblasts using the C2.7 myoblast cell line (Barbosa et al. 2005). An increased HS production by differentiating soleus and EDL myoblasts was also observed here. It was also shown that the attenuation of TGFβ1 activity by using antibodies increased the amount of GAGs produced by myoblasts at the cellular level and accelerated the shift of GAG composition from CS to HS species. As it has been shown that DS/CS moiety of some proteoglycans sequesters TGFβ [54] and that its biological activity could be negatively regulated by HS [55], it can be conceivable that GAGs, principally of HS species synthesized by differentiating cells, would finally diminish the action of this growth factor at cellular level. The presence of antibodies would amplify this effect by favoring HS species accumulation. Such a virtuous loop has been suggested in a study where epithelial cells were used. In these cells, deficiency or enzymatic removal of HS at the cellular surface attenuates degradation of TGFβ1 and increases TGFβ1 signaling [55]. However, since in vivo in the presence of the antibodies, total amount of GAGs measured in muscles was reduced compared to untreated muscles in contrast with what was observed in vitro at myoblast level. Thus, the participation of myoblasts in vivo in the production of GAGs might contribute to a minor degree compared to the other cells, including inflammatory cells and endothelial cells that compose the muscular tissue, without forgetting fibroblasts as recently underscore by Brandan's group [56].
The present study indicated that the control of TGFβ1 activity is necessary to improve regeneration of injured muscle and myoblast differentiation, and that this effect is in part related to GAG composition of muscle cell environment. The next steps would be to decipher the sequence of GAGs produced in vivo in relation to interacting bioactive proteins including TGFβ1 in regenerating muscles and to determine their spatial distribution. Routine GAG sequencing techniques, as well as tools for analyzing localization of sequences biologically relevant for muscle differentiation, remain to be available. Nevertheless, the present study supports the idea that antagonizing TGFβ1action with neutralizing antibody could rescue accurate skeletal muscle regeneration in part by acting at the myoblast level through an alteration of GAG environment.