| Literature DB >> 31375141 |
Jaira F de Vasconcellos1,2, Sonia Zicari1,2, Stephen D Fernicola1, Daniel W Griffin1, Youngmi Ji1, Emily H Shin1, Patrick Jones1, Gregory T Christopherson1, Husain Bharmal1, Carl Cirino1, Thao Nguyen3, Astor Robertson3, Vincent D Pellegrini4, Leon J Nesti5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The relationship between the tissue injury healing response and development of heterotopic ossification (HO) is poorly understood. Here we compare a rat blast model and human traumatized muscle from a blast injury to study the early signatures of osteogenesis and fibrosis during the formation of HO.Entities:
Keywords: Fibrosis; HO; Heterotopic ossification; Rat blast model
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31375141 PMCID: PMC6679453 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-019-1996-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Radiographic images of rat thigh (left) and human femur (right) at 7- or 10- and 42-days post traumatic blast amputation. The insets at 42 days post-injury show regions rich in bone formation within the soft tissue
Fig. 2Relative gene expression of the bone related genes OPN, RUNX2 and COL1A1 as evaluated with q-RT-PCR of RNA from rat muscle tissue at 7-days (upper panels) and human muscle tissue at 10-days (lower panels) following traumatic blast injury. All differences shown are statistically significant (p < 0.01; Student’s t-test; error bar = SD)
Fig. 3Hematoxylin & eosin stain of rat and human muscle at 7- or 10-days post trauma (NF = normal fibers, FP = fibroproliferative region, Fat = adipose tissue). Stained slides were scanned using Scanscope (Aperio, Vista, California) and images were taken at ×10 magnification
Fig. 4Sections from uninjured control (top panels) and injured (bottom panels) rat and human muscle at 7- or 10-days post trauma. The tissue samples were stained with picrosirius red and photographed under 10X magnification of bright field or polarized light as indicated using Axio scope A1 polarized light microscopy (Carl Zeiss, Thornwood, NY)
Fig. 5Sections from injured rat (left) and human (right) decellularized muscle at 7- or 10-days post trauma. Scanning electron microscopy was performed on the samples as shown
Fig. 6Sections of injured rat (left) and human (right) muscle were processed for immnoflourescent microscopy using antibodies to either TGF-β1 (red) or CD31 (green)
Fig. 7a Protein extracts from rat and human uninjured control and blast trauma injured muscle tissue (Rat, 7-days; Human, 10-days HO positive patient sample) were examined by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting with the indicated antibodies: Fibronectin, TGF-β1, SMAD3 and PAI-1. GAPDH was used as loading control. Presented are data from one representative patient per group. b Rat and human tissue demonstrating increase in fold regulation compared to control tissues (error bars = SD). Common cytokine PCR array was performed using RNAs from rat (7-day post-injury) and human (10-day post-injury) muscle tissue following traumatic blast injury