PDGFD: A Dual-Function Regulator That Maintains Myoblast Pool and Fuels Myogenic Differentiation
Hongzhen Cao, Jing Wang, Yunzhou Wang, Jingsen Huang, Wei Chen, Hui Tang, Junfeng Chen, Baosong Xing, Yongqing Zeng

TL;DR
This study discovers that PDGFD helps maintain muscle cell populations and promotes muscle cell differentiation in skeletal muscle development.
Contribution
The novel dual role of PDGFD in both maintaining myoblasts and initiating myogenic differentiation is identified for the first time.
Findings
PDGFD knockdown inhibits myoblast proliferation and promotes apoptosis.
PDGFD overexpression enhances cell viability and inhibits apoptosis.
PDGFD regulates myogenic differentiation markers MyoD and MyoG.
Abstract
The role of platelet-derived growth factor D (PDGFD) in mesenchymal cells is well-established, but its specific function in skeletal muscle generation remains unknown. This study reveals for the first time PDGFD’s dual regulatory role in myogenesis: it acts both as a “guardian” maintaining the myoblast pool and as an “initiator” driving myogenic differentiation. Through single-cell RNA sequencing analysis of skeletal muscle from Jiangquan Black pigs, we identified PDGFD as a common candidate gene for both muscle and fat development. In the C2C12 cell model, PDGFD knockdown significantly inhibited cell proliferation and promoted apoptosis, while overexpression enhanced viability and inhibited apoptosis, indicating its critical role in maintaining myoprogenic precursor cell homeostasis. Further studies revealed that PDGFD interference downregulated key myogenic differentiation markers…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMuscle Physiology and Disorders · Inflammatory Myopathies and Dermatomyositis · Caveolin-1 and cellular processes
