Treatment with a Novel activin receptor IIB ligand trap improves muscle mass and bone geometry in a mouse model of severe Osteogenesis Imperfecta

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josephine T. Tauer ◽  
Frank Rauch
Bone Research ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas J. DiGirolamo ◽  
Vandana Singhal ◽  
Xiaoli Chang ◽  
Se-Jin Lee ◽  
Emily L. Germain-Lee

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Youngjae Jeong

[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] Osteogenesis Imperfecta (OI) is a heritable connective tissue disorder primarily due to mutations in the type I collagen containing tissues, such as bone, skin and blood vessels. The clinical manifestations of OI include skeletal deformity and fragility, scoliosis, growth retardation, and hearing loss. There is no cure for OI and current treatment is limited with anti-resorptive drugs, the bisphosphonates, and/or surgical intervention, which comes with adverse side-effects and high risk of device failure, respectively. Thus identifying an alternative strategy to strengthen the skeletal properties of OI is still critically needed. Bone and muscle are intimate tissues in a relation to their proximate locations and biochemical cross-talks. Bone responds and adapts to external stimuli, mainly the muscle mass and contractile strength, to alter its shape and mass due to its mechanosensing characteristic, and this makes muscle and bone mass to be positively correlated in normal condition. As a potential therapeutic option, we sought to enhance the muscle mass and function via physical exercise to indirectly improve the bone properties in OI. We have investigated the effects of the threadmill exercise in G610C OI mouse model, which has a glycine to cysteine substitution at position 610 of pro[alpha]2 collagen chain and mimics the phenotype of mild type I/IV OI individuals. Treadmill exercised heterozygous G610C (+/G610C) mice exhibited similar exercise capacity as wildtype littermates and had increased femoral stiffness without altering bone biomechanical strength. Muscle mass can be regulated by myostatin, a negative regulator of muscle growth, and deficiency of myostatin in mice lead to abnormal muscle fiber growth. As an alternative approach, we have investigated the effects of pharmacological myostatin inhibition by using a soluble fusion protein activin receptor type IIB-mFc (sActRIIB-mFc). Myostatin signals through activin receptor type IIB (ActRIIB) on cell surface to regulate downstream signaling pathways and the sActRIIB-mFc act as "ligand trap" to bind any circulating myostatin proteins and prevent them from binding to their endogenous cellular receptors. As first part of this study, we investigated the effects of sActRIIB-mFc on muscle properties of two molecularly distinct OI mouse models, G610C and oim. Unlike G610C mouse model, homozygous oim (oim/oim) has a mutation in col1[alpha]2 genes thus synthesizing nonfunctional pro[alpha]2(I) collagen chain and leading to synthesis of homotrimeric [alpha]1(I)3, instead of normal heterotrimeric [alpha]1(I)2[alpha]2(I). oim/oim also exhibit muscle atrophy with compromised muscle contractile strength. 8 weeks of bi-weekly sActRIIB-mFc (10mg/kg) treatment in +/G610C and oim/oim mice was able to induce the increase in body weight and skeletal muscle mass. In addition, oim/oim mice exhibited increase in absolute contractile strength without altering relative and specific muscle function, suggesting a potential therapeutic option for muscle weakness in oim/oim mice. As second part of this study, we investigated the effects of sActRIIB-mFc on skeletal properties of these two OI mouse models. sActRIIB-mFc treated +/G610C and oim/oim mice exhibited increase in trabecular bone microarchitecture, and +/G610C mice had further increase in cortical bone geometry and biomechanical strength. Overall, my current study demonstrated that sActRIIB-mFc treatment was effective in both G610C and oim mouse models to enhance their muscle and bone properties, although they exhibited different responses in such that G610C mice did not show a statistically significant increase in muscle contractile function while the oim mice did not show increase in cortical bone geometry and biomechanical strength. I postulate that this was potentially due to the differences in molecular mutation and severity of the phenotype, thus more thorough investigation in molecular and cellular mechanisms of sActRIIB-mFc in these two different OI mouse models will hold promise in developing more targeted therapeutic option for OI.


2006 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. S14
Author(s):  
Julie Dumonceaux ◽  
Solenne Marie ◽  
Luis Garcia

2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (47) ◽  
pp. 13522-13527 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arin K. Oestreich ◽  
William M. Kamp ◽  
Marcus G. McCray ◽  
Stephanie M. Carleton ◽  
Natalia Karasseva ◽  
...  

During fetal development, the uterine environment can have effects on offspring bone architecture and integrity that persist into adulthood; however, the biochemical and molecular mechanisms remain unknown. Myostatin is a negative regulator of muscle mass. Parental myostatin deficiency (Mstntm1Sjl/+) increases muscle mass in wild-type offspring, suggesting an intrauterine programming effect. Here, we hypothesized that Mstntm1Sjl/+ dams would also confer increased bone strength. In wild-type offspring, maternal myostatin deficiency altered fetal growth and calvarial collagen content of newborn mice and conferred a lasting impact on bone geometry and biomechanical integrity of offspring at 4 mo of age, the age of peak bone mass. Second, we sought to apply maternal myostatin deficiency to a mouse model with osteogenesis imperfecta (Col1a2oim), a heritable connective tissue disorder caused by abnormalities in the structure and/or synthesis of type I collagen. Femora of male Col1a2oim/+ offspring from natural mating of Mstntm1Sjl/+ dams to Col1a2oim/+sires had a 15% increase in torsional ultimate strength, a 29% increase in tensile strength, and a 24% increase in energy to failure compared with age, sex, and genotype-matched offspring from natural mating of Col1a2oim/+ dams to Col1a2oim/+ sires. Finally, increased bone biomechanical strength of Col1a2oim/+ offspring that had been transferred into Mstntm1Sjl/+ dams as blastocysts demonstrated that the effects of maternal myostatin deficiency were conferred by the postimplantation environment. Thus, targeting the gestational environment, and specifically prenatal myostatin pathways, provides a potential therapeutic window and an approach for treating osteogenesis imperfecta.


2016 ◽  
Vol 33 (12) ◽  
pp. 1128-1135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zachary A. Graham ◽  
Lauren Collier ◽  
Yuanzhen Peng ◽  
Juan C. Saéz ◽  
William A. Bauman ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wayne Cabral ◽  
Irina Perdivara ◽  
MaryAnn Weis ◽  
Masahiko Terajima ◽  
Angela Blissett ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig Munns ◽  
Lauren Peacock ◽  
Kathy Mikulec ◽  
Michaela Kneissel ◽  
Ina Kramer ◽  
...  

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