| Literature DB >> 26034749 |
Hans Gollwitzer1, Xu Yang2, Lyudmila Spevak2, Lyudmila Lukashova2, Allina Nocon2, Kara Fields2, Nancy Pleshko3, Hayden William Courtland2, Mathias P Bostrom2, Adele L Boskey2.
Abstract
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic imaging (FTIRI) was used to study bone healing with spatial analysis of various callus tissues in wild type mice. Femoral fractures were produced in 28 male C57BL mice by osteotomy. Animals were sacrificed at 1, 2, 4, and 8 weeks to obtain callus tissue at well-defined healing stages. Following microcomputerized tomography, bone samples were cut in consecutive sections for FTIRI and histology, allowing for spatial correlation of both imaging methods in different callus areas (early calcified cartilage, woven bone, areas of intramembranous and endochondral bone formation). Based on FTIRI, mineral/matrix ratio increased significantly during the first 4 weeks of fracture healing in all callus areas and correlated with bone mineral density measured by micro-CT. Carbonate/phosphate ratio was elevated in newly formed calcified tissue and at week 2 attained values comparable to cortical bone. Collagen maturity and mineral crystallinity increased during weeks 1-8 in most tissues while acid phosphate substitution decreased. Temporal and callus area dependent changes were detected throughout the healing period. These data assert the usefulness of FTIRI for evaluation of fracture healing in the mouse and its potential to evaluate pathologic fracture healing and the effects of therapeutic interventions.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26034749 PMCID: PMC4448139 DOI: 10.1155/2015/659473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Spectrosc (Hindawi) ISSN: 2314-4939
Stages of fracture healing in areas of endochondral bone formation as related to the different time points investigated by FT-IRI in the mouse. Intramembranous bone formation directly results in woven bone and hard callus without prior cartilage formation (stage 1 is excluded since this stage the fracture callus is an amorphous hematoma).
| Stage 1 inflammation | Stage 2 soft callus | Stage 3 hard callus | Stage 4 remodeling | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Time | Before week 1 | Weeks 1 and 2 | Week 2 and 4 | Weeks 4 and 8 |
| Predominant cell type | Inflammatory cells, platelets, macrophages | Chondrocytes, fibroblast, mesenchymal progenitors | Osteoblasts, “chondroclasts” | Osteoclast, osteoblast |
| Matrix | Hematoma, granulation tissue | ECM proteins (collagen II, Collagen X) | mineralized bone matrix, collagen I, woven bone | Lamellar bone, cortical and trabecular structure |
| Fracture healing processes | Reorganization migration of MSCs | Endochondral ossification, matrix mineralization | Vascular invasion, replacement of cartilage by bone | Bone and matrix degradation, new bone formation |
Figure 1Different histological areas within the fracture callus that were studied by FTIRI. Normal cortical bone (CO) remote of the callus served as reference bone. Scale bars = 100 μm. (CC) areas of calcified cartilage; (EC) = areas of endochondral new bone formation; (WB) areas of woven bone formation; (IM) = areas of intramembranous new bone formation. Correlation of TMD and mineral/matrix ratio in the fracture callus is in Figure 2(c). The mineral/matrix values for each area of the callus were plotted versus the time at which a given TMD was measured. The least square best line shown was fitted through all these data points.
FT-IRI parameters described in the present study; HA = hydroxyapatite [7, 27, 28].
| Parameter | Origin | Spectral measurement |
|---|---|---|
| Mineral/matrix | PO43−
| (916–1180 cm−1)/(1588–1712 cm−1) area ratio |
| Carbonate/phosphate | CO32−
| (852–890 cm−1)/(916–1180 cm−1) area ratio |
| HA crystallinity/maturity | Shape changes in PO43−
| 1030 cm−1/1020 cm−1 peak-height ratio |
| Collagen cross-links/maturity | Changes in amide I contour | 1660 cm−1/1690 cm−1 peak-height ratio |
| Acid phosphate content | Shape changes in PO43−
| 1112 cm−1/1096 cm−1 peak-height ratio |
Figure 2Microcomputed tomography shows changes in fracture callus with time. (a) Tissue mineral density (TMD; g/cc) increases linearly from weeks 1–4 but never reaches value of cortical bone. (b) Bone volume fraction (BV/TV) decreases from week 2–8. (c) Mineral/matrix ratio as determined by FTIRI in the different regions of the callus correlated with TMD measured at that same point in time.
Microcomputed tomography summary statistics.
| Parameter | BV/TV | TMD | Callus volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 versus 2 | < | 0.172 | |
| Week 1 versus 4 | 0.068 | ||
| Week 1 versus 8 | 0.320 | ||
| Week 2 versus 4 | 0.189 | 0.051 | 0.677 |
| Week 2 versus 8 | 0.051 | 0.254 | |
| Week 4 versus 8 | 0.881 | 0.990 | 0.853 |
Statistically sigificant values are shown in bold.
Figure 3Mineral/matrix in whole callus and underlying fractured bone at 2 (a) and 4 (b) weeks after fracture. Figure (c) shows typical spectra from (1) callus, (2) woven bone, and (3) cortical bone. Note the strong subband at 1112 cm−1 in (1) and (2).
Figure 4Second-derivative spectra of woven bone at 2 weeks of healing. Note the position of the peaks agree with the parameters used to characterize the mineral shown in Table 2.
Figure 5Quantitative results of FTIRI of the various callus tissues and cortical bone at different time-points. Each value represents the mean of 6 to 8 bone specimens of equivalent tissue type and time point (CC: N = 3). (a) Mineral/matrix ratio; (b) carbonate/phosphate ratio; (c) hydroxyapatite crystallinity; (d) acid phosphate substitution into hydroxyapatite. (e) Collagen maturity. CO = cortical bone; WB = woven bone; IM = area of intramembranous new bone formation; EC = area of endochondral new bone formation; CC = early calcified cartilage.
Point-by-point comparisons of FTIRI Data (illustrated in Figure 5).
| (a) Mineral/Matrix | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Week | Tissue | CO | EC | IM | WB |
| 1 | CC | < | 0.197 | 0.099 | < |
| CO | < | < | < | ||
| EC | 0.999 | 0.484 | |||
| IM | 0.282 | ||||
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| 2 | CC | 0.966 | 0.999 | 0.998 | |
| CO | < | < | |||
| EC | 0.421 | 0.121 | |||
| IM | 0.999 | ||||
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| 4 | CC | — | — | — | — |
| CO | — | < | |||
| EC | — | — | |||
| IM | 0.542 | ||||
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| 8 | CC | — | — | — | — |
| CO | — | < | |||
| EC | — | — | |||
| IM | 0.971 | ||||
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| Tissue | Week | 2 | 4 | 8 | |
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| CC | 1 | < | — | — | |
| 2 | — | — | |||
| 4 | — | ||||
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| CO | 1 | 0.887 | 0.903 | 0.999 | |
| 2 | 0.999 | 0.793 | |||
| 4 | 0.783 | ||||
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| EC | 1 | — | — | ||
| 2 | — | — | |||
| 4 | — | ||||
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| IM | 1 | < | < | < | |
| 2 | 0.160 | 0.340 | |||
| 4 | 0.999 | ||||
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| WB | 1 | < | < | ||
| 2 | 0.628 | ||||
| 4 | 0.946 | ||||
Statistically significant P values are shown in bold. CO= cortical bone; CC = calcified cartilage; EC = endochondral bone; IM = intramembranous bone; WB = woven bone. Times are weeks after fracture.