Cyclooxygenase-2 regulates mesenchymal cell differentiation into the osteoblast lineage and is critically involved in bone repair
Xinping Zhang,Edward M. Schwarz,Donald A. Young,J. Edward Puzas,Randy N. Rosier,Regis J. O'Keefe +5 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that COX-2 plays an essential role in both endochondral and intramembranous bone formation during skeletal repair and regulates the induction of cbfa1 and osterix to mediate normal skeletal repair.
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Abstract: Preclinical and clinical studies suggest a possible role for cyclooxygenases in bone repair and create concerns about the use of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs in patients with skeletal injury. We utilized wild-type, COX-1(-/-), and COX-2(-/-) mice to demonstrate that COX-2 plays an essential role in both endochondral and intramembranous bone formation during skeletal repair. The healing of stabilized tibia fractures was significantly delayed in COX-2(-/-) mice compared with COX-1(-/-) and wild-type controls. The histology was characterized by a persistence of undifferentiated mesenchyme and a marked reduction in osteoblastogenesis that resulted in a high incidence of fibrous nonunion in the COX-2(-/-) mice. Similarly, intramembranous bone formation on the calvaria was reduced 60% in COX-2(-/-) mice following in vivo injection of FGF-1 compared with either COX-1(-/-) or wild-type mice. To elucidate the mechanism involved in reduced bone formation, osteoblastogenesis was studied in bone marrow stromal cell cultures obtained from COX-2(-/-) and wild-type mice. Bone nodule formation was reduced 50% in COX-2(-/-) mice. The defect in osteogenesis was completely rescued by addition of prostaglandin E2 (PGE(2)) to the cultures. In the presence of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP-2), bone nodule formation was enhanced to a similar level above that observed with PGE(2) alone in both control and COX-2(-/-) cultures, indicating that BMPs complement COX-2 deficiency and are downstream of prostaglandins. Furthermore, we found that the defect in COX-2(-/-) cultures correlated with significantly reduced levels of cbfa1 and osterix, two genes necessary for bone formation. Addition of PGE(2) rescued this defect, while BMP-2 enhanced cbfa1 and osterix in both COX-2(-/-) and wild-type cultures. Finally, the effects of these agents were additive, indicating that COX-2 is involved in maximal induction of osteogenesis. These results provide a model whereby COX-2 regulates the induction of cbfa1 and osterix to mediate normal skeletal repair.
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Citations
In vitro functional characterization of prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 during chondrocyte hypertrophic differentiation.
Na Li,Qian Wang,Ting Zhu,Longwei Qiao,Fei Zhang,Rui Mi,Bo Wang,Lin Chen,Junxia Gu,Yaojuan Lu,Qiping Zheng +10 more
TL;DR: The results support that Cox-2 promotes Col10a1 expression and chondrocyte hypertrophy in vitro, possibly through upregulation of Runx2 and other relevant transcription factors.
Anti-TNFα therapy in ankylosing spondylitis: symptom control and structural damage modification
TL;DR: Despite the fast and continuous suppression of bone inflammation, demonstrated by magnetic resonance imaging, the beneficial effect of treatment with TNFα antagonists on the radiological evolution has not been demonstrated to date in ankylosing spondylitis and it seems that insights into new therapeutic molecular targets implicated in the process of ossification are needed.
3
Diffuse microdamage in bone activates anabolic response by osteoblasts via involvement of voltage-gated calcium channels
Hyungjin Jung,Ozan Akkus +1 more
TL;DR: This study demonstrated that DMICE activates anabolic responses of osteoblasts through activation of VGCC, and future studies of osteoblast response to DMICE in vivo will help to clarify how bone cells repair diffuse microdamage.
3
Crosstalk between Cytokine RANKL and AhR Signalling in Osteoclasts Controls Bone Homeostasis
Takashi Izawa,Rieko Arakaki,Naozumi Ishimaru +2 more
- 01 Jan 2017
TL;DR: The present review highlights the recently uncovered critical role that RANKL–AhR–c-Fos signaling plays in osteoclastogenesis and suggests AhR is a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of inflammatory and metabolic bone diseases.
3
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