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Calcium-Sensing Receptors in Chondrocytes and Osteoblasts Are Required for Callus Maturation and Fracture Healing in Mice
Authors:Zhiqiang Cheng  Alfred Li  Chia-Ling Tu  Christian Santa Maria  Nicholas Szeto  Amanda Herberger  Tsui-Hua Chen  Fuqing Song  Jiali Wang  Xiaodong Liu  Dolores M Shoback  Wenhan Chang
Institution:Endocrine Research Unit, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, NCIRE, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA
Abstract:Calcium and its putative receptor (CaSR) control skeletal development by pacing chondrocyte differentiation and mediating osteoblast (OB) function during endochondral bone formation—an essential process recapitulated during fracture repair. Here, we delineated the role of the CaSR in mediating transition of callus chondrocytes into the OB lineage and subsequent bone formation at fracture sites and explored targeting CaSRs pharmacologically to enhance fracture repair. In chondrocytes cultured from soft calluses at a closed, unfixed fracture site, extracellular Ca2+] and the allosteric CaSR agonist (NPS-R568) promoted terminal differentiation of resident cells and the attainment of an osteoblastic phenotype. Knockout (KO) of the Casr gene in chondrocytes lengthened the chondrogenic phase of fracture repair by increasing cell proliferation in soft calluses but retarded subsequent osteogenic activity in hard calluses. Tracing growth plate (GP) and callus chondrocytes that express Rosa26-tdTomato showed reduced chondrocyte transition into OBs (by >80%) in the spongiosa of the metaphysis and in hard calluses. In addition, KO of the Casr gene specifically in mature OBs suppressed osteogenic activity and mineralizing function in bony calluses. Importantly, in experiments using PTH (1-34) to enhance fracture healing, co-injection of NPS-R568 not only normalized the hypercalcemic side effects of intermittent PTH (1-34) treatment in mice but also produced synergistic osteoanabolic effects in calluses. These data indicate a functional role of CaSR in mediating chondrogenesis and osteogenesis in the fracture callus and the potential of CaSR agonism to facilitate fracture repair. © 2019 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
Keywords:CARTILAGE  CaSR KNOCKOUT  CHONDROCYTE  CHONDROGENESIS  ENDOCHONDRAL BONE FORMATION  FRACTURE HEALING  OSTEOBLAST  OSTEOGENESIS  UNFIXED FRACTURE
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