Establishing biomechanical mechanisms in mouse models: practical guidelines for systematically evaluating phenotypic changes in the diaphyses of long bones.
Karl J. Jepsen,Matthew J. Silva,Deepak Vashishth,X. Edward Guo,Marjolein C. H. van der Meulen +4 more
297
TL;DR: A comprehensive framework is presented using real data, and several examples from the literature are reviewed to illustrate how to synthesize morphological, tissue‐level, and whole‐bone mechanical properties of mouse long bones.
read more
Abstract: Mice are widely used in studies of skeletal biology, and assessment of their bones by mechanical testing is a critical step when evaluating the functional effects of an experimental perturbation. For example, a gene knockout may target a pathway important in bone formation and result in a "low bone mass" phenotype. But how well does the skeleton bear functional loads; eg, how much do bones deform during loading and how resistant are bones to fracture? By systematic evaluation of bone morphological, densitometric, and mechanical properties, investigators can establish the "biomechanical mechanisms" whereby an experimental perturbation alters whole-bone mechanical function. The goal of this review is to clarify these biomechanical mechanisms and to make recommendations for systematically evaluating phenotypic changes in mouse bones, with a focus on long-bone diaphyses and cortical bone. Further, minimum reportable standards for testing conditions and outcome variables are suggested that will improve the comparison of data across studies. Basic biomechanical principles are reviewed, followed by a description of the cross-sectional morphological properties that best inform the net cellular effects of a given experimental perturbation and are most relevant to biomechanical function. Although morphology is critical, whole-bone mechanical properties can only be determined accurately by a mechanical test. The functional importance of stiffness, maximum load, postyield displacement, and work-to-fracture are reviewed. Because bone and body size are often strongly related, strategies to adjust whole-bone properties for body mass are detailed. Finally, a comprehensive framework is presented using real data, and several examples from the literature are reviewed to illustrate how to synthesize morphological, tissue-level, and whole-bone mechanical properties of mouse long bones.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Region-specific associations among tissue-level mechanical properties, porosity, and composition in human male femora.
Gurjit S. Mandair,Erin M.R. Bigelow,Gowri Viswanathan,Ferrous S. Ward,Daniella M. Patton,Stephen H. Schlecht,Karl J. Jepsen,David Koh +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors found that the decline in tissue-level strength and post-yield strain with age is not uniform within the femur, but is driven by region-specific differences in porosity and composition.
Local Infiltrative Analgesia of Murine Femur Fractures In Vivo Does Not Inhibit Fracture Healing
TL;DR: Investigation of the hypothesis that local anesthetics decrease secondary bone healing and callus formation in stabilized murine femur fractures through chondrocyte apoptosis found no significant differences in callus size or mineralization between controls and fractures treated with a local anesthetic.
Genetic Variability affects the Skeletal Response to Unloading
Michael A. Friedman,Abdullah Abood,Bhavya Senwar,Yue Zhang,Camilla Reina Maroni,Virginia L. Ferguson,Charles R. Farber,Henry J. Donahue +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest Diversity outbred mice will be highly suited for examining the genetic basis of the skeletal response to unloading and the most upregulated genes in response toUnloading were associated with increased collagen synthesis and extracellular matrix formation.
Zoledronic Acid Prevents Bone Resorption Caused by the Combination of Radium-223, Abiraterone Acetate, and Prednisone in an Intratibial Prostate Cancer Mouse Model
Mari I. Suominen,Matti Knuuttila,Birgitta Sjöholm,Timothy G Wilson,Esa Alhoniemi,Dominik Mumberg,Sanna-Maria Käkönen,Arne Scholz +7 more
TL;DR: Evaluated the efficacy and potential bone health-related effects of radium-223, abiraterone acetate, prednisone, and zoledronic acid as monotherapies or combinations in an intratibial LNCaP prostate cancer xenograft model mimicking bone metastatic prostate cancer to identify mechanisms leading to an increased fracture risk.
References
Sox9 Modulates Proliferation and Expression of Osteogenic Markers of Adipose-Derived Stem Cells (ASC)
TL;DR: A pro-proliferative role for Sox9 in undifferentiated rASC is suggested which may explain the higher proliferation rate of rASC compared to rBMSC and an osteogenic differentiation delaying role of Sox9 is proposed which suggests that Sox9 expression is needed to maintain rASC in an undifferentiate, proliferative state.
Guidelines for assessment of bone microstructure in rodents using micro–computed tomography
Mary L. Bouxsein,Stephen K Boyd,Blaine A. Christiansen,Robert E. Guldberg,Karl J. Jepsen,Ralph Müller +5 more
TL;DR: Standard nomenclature, outlined in this article, should be followed for reporting of results of µCT‐derived bone morphometry and density measurements.
3.7K
Canalization of development and the inheritance of acquired characters
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest that recent views on the nature of the developmental process make it easier to understand how the genotypes of evolving organisms can respond to the environment in a more co-ordinated fashion.
3K
Correlation and Causation
Victor R. Martuza,David A. Kenny +1 more
TL;DR: Causality is the area of statistics that is most commonly misused, and misinterpreted, by nonspecialists as discussed by the authors, who fail to understand that, just because results show a correlation, there is no proof of an underlying causality.
2.9K
•Book
Canalization of development and the inheritance of acquired characters
Conrad Hal Waddington
- 01 Apr 1996
TL;DR: It is suggested that recent views on the nature of the developmental process make it easier to understand how the genotypes of evolving organisms can respond to the environment in a more co-ordinated fashion.
2.6K