| Literature DB >> 26721590 |
Yinshi Ren1, Xianglong Han2, Yan Jing1, Baozhi Yuan3, Huazhu Ke4, Min Liu4, Jian Q Feng5.
Abstract
Unlike treatments for most rickets, the treatment using 1,25-(OH)2 vitamin D3 has little efficacy on patients with hypophosphatemic rickets, a set of rare genetic diseases. Thus, understanding the local cause for osteomalacia in hypophosphatemic rickets and developing an effective treatment to restore mineralization in this rare disease has been a longstanding goal in medicine. Here, we used Dmp1 knockout (KO) mice (whose mutations led to the same type of autosomal recessive hypophosphatemic rickets in humans) as the model in which the monoclonal antibody of sclerostin (Scl-Ab) was tested in two age groups for 8weeks: the prevention group (starting at age 4weeks) and the treatment group (starting at age 12weeks). Applications of Scl-Ab greatly improved the osteomalacia phenotype (>15%) and the biomechanical properties (3-point bending, ~60%) in the treated long-bone group. Our studies not only showed improvement of the osteomalacia in the alveolar bone, which has the highest bone metabolism rate, as well as the long bone phenotypes in treated mice. All these improvements attributed to the use of Scl-Ab are independent of the change in serum levels of phosphorus and FGF23, since Scl-Ab had little efficacy on those parameters. Finally, we propose a model to explain how Scl-Ab can improve the Dmp1 KO osteomalacia phenotype, in which the sclerostin level is already low.Entities:
Keywords: DMP1; Hypophosphatemic rickets; Osteocytes; PDL; SOST; Sclerostin antibody
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26721590 PMCID: PMC4875883 DOI: 10.1016/j.matbio.2015.12.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matrix Biol ISSN: 0945-053X Impact factor: 11.583