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Research

EXOSOMES FROM MECHANICALLY STIMULATED MYOBLASTS PRODUCE DIFFERENTIAL MIRNA CARGO

The 29th Annual Meeting of the European Orthopaedic Research Society (EORS), Rome, Italy, 15–17 September 2021.



Abstract

Introduction and Objective

Exosomal miRNA have been shown to regulate many myogenic and osteogenic pathways involved in injury repair and healing. It is also known that rehabilitation and exercise can improve muscle mass and bone growth. The mechanisms by which this occurs in vivo are well studied, but the impact exosomes and their associated miRNA cargo have is unclear. With this knowledge and question in mind, we hypothesized that C2C12 myoblasts subjected to in vitro mechanical stimulus (“exercise”) would exhibit improved exosome production and differentially expressed miRNA cargo when compared to their static (“unexercised”) counterparts.

Materials and Methods

C2C12 myoblasts were cultured using the FlexCell FX-5000TT bioreactor. Two exercise regimens were programmed: 1) low intensity regimen (LIR) (0–15% strain at 0.5 Hz for 24 hours) 2) high intensity interval regimen (HIIR) (12–22% strain at 1 Hz for 10 minutes followed by 50 minutes of rest repeated for 24 hours). Unexercised (static) cells were cultured in parallel. Exosomes were isolated using the Invitrogen Total Exosome Isolation Reagent. The Pierce BCA Protein Assay, System Bioscience's ExoELISA-ULTRA CD81 Kit and, SBI's ExoFlow-ONE EV labeling kit were used to confirm and quantify exosome number and protein concentration. The SBI Exo-NGS service was used to perform miRNA sequencing on isolated exosomes.

Results

All exercise regimens resulted in increased exosome concentrations as determined by CD81 exosome ELISA and flow-cytometry based exosome quantification. The LIR interestingly produced significantly more exosomes than static and HIIR. Within the exosomes from mechanically stimulated cells, 35 miRNAs were found to be differentially expressed when compared to exosomes from unexercised cells. Interestingly, this significance was only found within exosomes from the HIIR group. Specifically, upon investigation 8 of these miRNAs were found to be involved in myogenic and osteogenic proliferation and differentiation. These results correlate with our previous findings that exosomes from exercised cells improve the proliferation and myogenic differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts.

Conclusions

Our results indicate that exercise can be optimized to improve the production and regenerative capacity of exosomes. These results also indicate that exosomes may be intimately involved in systemic health and repair during rehabilitation and exercise. To examine these results in vivo, mouse studies using a crush injury model and exosomes from mechanically stimulated cells are currently planned.


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