首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Bone defect repair in immobilization-induced osteopenia: a pQCT, biomechanical, and molecular biologic study in the mouse femur
Authors:Uusitalo H  Rantakokko J  Vuorio E  Aro H T
Affiliation:Skeletal Research Program, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Turku, Turku, Finland.
Abstract:The present study was carried out to determine whether immobilization-induced (Im) osteopenic bone possesses the same reparative capacity as normal healthy bone. Furthermore, the effects of mechanical loading versus immobilization on bone defect healing were studied. Three-week cast-immobilization was used to induce local osteopenia in mice. A standardized metaphyseal bone defect of the distal femur was created unilaterally both in immobilization-induced (Im) osteopenic mice and in nonimmobilized (Mo) age-matched control animals. After creation of the bone defect, the animals in both groups were further divided into two groups: 3-week cast-immobilization (Im-Im and Mo-Im) groups, and unrestricted weight-bearing (Im-Mo and Mo-Mo) groups. The healing process was followed up to 3 weeks using RNA analysis, histomorphometry, biomechanical testing, and pQCT measurements. At 3 weeks of healing without immobilization, bone mineral density (BMD), as well as bone bending stiffness and strength were higher in normal (Mo-Mo) than in osteopenic (Im-Mo) bone. Although the levels of mRNAs characteristic to chondrocytes (Sox9 and type II collagen), hypertrophic chondrocytes (Type X collagen), osteoblasts (type I collagen and osteocalcin), and osteoclasts (cathepsin K) during the bone defect healing exhibited similarities in their expression profiles, mechanical loading conditions also caused characteristic differences. Mechanical loading during healing (Mo-Mo group) induced stronger expression of cartilage- and bone-specific genes and resulted in higher BMD than that seen in the cast-immobilized group (Mo-Im). In biomechanical analysis, increased bending stiffness and strength were also observed in animals that were allowed weight-bearing during healing. Thus, our study shows that bone healing follows the same molecular pathway both in osteopenic and normal bones and presents evidence for reduced or delayed regeneration of noncritical size defects in immobilization-induced osteopenic bone.
Keywords:
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号