| Literature DB >> 27530373 |
Nicholas A Mignemi1, Masato Yuasa1,2, Courtney E Baker3, Stephanie N Moore1,4, Rivka C Ihejirika3, William K Oelsner1, Christopher S Wallace3, Toshitaka Yoshii2, Atsushi Okawa2, Alexey S Revenko5, A Robert MacLeod5, Gourab Bhattacharjee5, Joey V Barnett3,4, Herbert S Schwartz1, Jay L Degen6, Matthew J Flick6, Justin M Cates7, Jonathan G Schoenecker1,4,7,8,9.
Abstract
Extensive or persistent calcium phosphate deposition within soft tissues after severe traumatic injury or major orthopedic surgery can result in pain and loss of joint function. The pathophysiology of soft tissue calcification, including dystrophic calcification and heterotopic ossification (HO), is poorly understood; consequently, current treatments are suboptimal. Here, we show that plasmin protease activity prevents dystrophic calcification within injured skeletal muscle independent of its canonical fibrinolytic function. After muscle injury, dystrophic calcifications either can be resorbed during the process of tissue healing, persist, or become organized into mature bone (HO). Without sufficient plasmin activity, dystrophic calcifications persist after muscle injury and are sufficient to induce HO. Downregulating the primary inhibitor of plasmin (α2-antiplasmin) or treating with pyrophosphate analogues prevents dystrophic calcification and subsequent HO in vivo. Because plasmin also supports bone homeostasis and fracture repair, increasing plasmin activity represents the first pharmacologic strategy to prevent soft tissue calcification without adversely affecting systemic bone physiology or concurrent muscle and bone regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: DISORDERS OF CALCIUM/PHOSPHATE; INJURY/FRACTURE HEALING-ORTHOPEDICS; PRECLINICAL STUDIES; SKELETAL MUSCLE; THERAPEUTICS-OTHER
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27530373 DOI: 10.1002/jbmr.2973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bone Miner Res ISSN: 0884-0431 Impact factor: 6.741