| Literature DB >> 27535945 |
Bernard Freudenthal1, John Logan1, Peter I Croucher2, Graham R Williams3, J H Duncan Bassett3.
Abstract
The genetic determinants of osteoporosis remain poorly understood, and there is a large unmet need for new treatments in our ageing society. Thus, new approaches for gene discovery in skeletal disease are required to complement the current genome-wide association studies in human populations. The International Knockout Mouse Consortium (IKMC) and the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium (IMPC) provide such an opportunity. The IKMC generates knockout mice representing each of the known protein-coding genes in C57BL/6 mice and, as part of the IMPC initiative, the Origins of Bone and Cartilage Disease project identifies mutants with significant outlier skeletal phenotypes. This initiative will add value to data from large human cohorts and provide a new understanding of bone and cartilage pathophysiology, ultimately leading to the identification of novel drug targets for the treatment of skeletal disease.Entities:
Keywords: bone; gene discovery; genetics; osteoporosis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27535945 PMCID: PMC5064764 DOI: 10.1530/JOE-16-0258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endocrinol ISSN: 0022-0795 Impact factor: 4.286
Monogenic disorders that have identified key skeletal genes in bone remodelling.
| Reduced bone mass | Osteoporosis- pseudoglioma syndrome (OPPGS) | Reduced bone mass and blindness | Loss-of-function mutations disrupt Wnt signalling and reduce osteoblastic bone formation. | ( | |
| Osteogenesis imperfecta | Increased bone fragility; blue sclerae in some types | Loss-of-function mutations in collagen and collagen- processing proteins cause abnormal osteoid matrix, thereby impairing normal bone formation. | ( | ||
| Juvenile-onset Paget disease | Short stature, fractures, skull enlargement, progressive deafness | Loss-of-function mutations disrupt inhibition of RANKL by osteoprotegerin, causing increased osteoclastic resorption of bone. | ( | ||
| X-linked osteoporosis | Juvenile-onset fractures in males | Loss-of-function mutations affect Plastin-3, an actin-binding protein. Mechanism osteoporosis is unknown. | ( | ||
| Increased bone mass | Osteopetrosis | Increased bone mass with fractures | Loss-of-function mutations affecting osteoclast differentiation and function cause reduced bone resorption. | ( | |
| Sclerosteosis and Van Buchem disease | Increased bone mass, syndactyly, entrapment neuropathies | Loss-of-function mutations affect inhibition of Wnt signalling by sclerostin, causing increased osteoblastic bone formation. | ( | ||
| Autosomal dominant high bone mass | Increased bone density, entrapment neuropathies, square jaw and torus palatinus | Gain-of-function mutation in Wnt co-receptor causes increased osteoblastic bone formation. | ( |
Figure 1Schematic representing the bone remodelling processes of the ‘basic multicellular unit’ in the endosteal surface of trabecular bone. Activation: microdamage to the bone causes osteocyte apoptosis, reducing local basal inhibition of osteoclastogenesis. Resorption: in response to PTH signalling, RANKL and CSF-1 (colony-stimulating factor-1) increase recruitment, proliferation and differentiation of osteoclasts, which demineralise the bone matrix and then digest the collagen matrix, the remnants being removed by macrophages. Formation: PTH and mechanical activation of osteocytes reduce sclerostin expression, removing the potent inhibition of Wnt-mediated osteoblast differentiation (via cell surface receptor Frizzled and co-receptors LRP5 and LRP6) and bone formation. Termination: in response to increasing levels of sclerostin, bone formation ceases and newly deposited osteoid is mineralised.
Figure 2Knockout-first strategy for creating dual-purpose knockout/conditional alleles. Bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC)-based targeting vectors are inserted by homologous recombination into mouse ES cells. Recombination steps with Cre or Flp recombinase are illustrated. (A) Knockout-first allele (reporter-tagged insertion allele). Gene-trap knockout is generated using a targeting cassette containing the marker genes lacZ and neomycin. A separate loxP site is inserted on the other side of a critical exon (Exon 2). (B) Conditional allele (post-Flp). By crossing mice with a Flp deleter strain, the gene-trap knockout is reversed and a floxed allele is created, enabling conditional Cre recombinase-mediated gene inactivation. (C) Deletion allele (post-Flp and Cre with no reporter).
Figure 3Flow chart showing how the OBCD bone phenotyping platform leads to identification of significant abnormal skeletal phenotypes, in conjunction with the IMPC standardised phenotyping project.
Figure 4OBCD skeletal phenotyping methods. (A) X-ray microradiography images of femur and fifth to sixth tail vertebrae from wild-type and mutant mice. Low bone mineral content is represented in green/yellow colour and high bone mineral content is represented in red/pink colour in pseudo-coloured images. Cumulative frequency graphs showing difference in bone mineral content between wild-type and mutant mice. (B) Micro-CT images of cortical and trabecular bone from wild-type and mutant mice. Cortical thickness and trabecular bone volume/total volume (BV/TV) parameters in the mutant are shown in comparison with reference mean ± 2 standard deviations. (C) Femur three-point bend and vertebral compression analysis with load–displacement curves illustrating biomechanical parameters.
Figure 5Flow chart outlining selection of knockout mouse lines for further study and analysis.
Examples of cell-specific promoter-driven Cre recombinases in available transgenic mouse lines
| Osteoblasts | ( | ||
| Osteoclasts | ( | ||
| Osteocytes | ( | ||
| Chondrocytes | ( |