| Literature DB >> 31700010 |
Michal Eger1, Miaad Bader1, Dara Bree2, Rivka Hadar3, Alina Nemirovski3, Joseph Tam3, Dan Levy2, Chaim G Pick1,4,5, Yankel Gabet6,7.
Abstract
Brain trauma was clinically associated with increased osteogenesis in the appendicular skeleton. We showed previously in C57BL/6J mice that mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) transiently induced bone formation in the femur via the cannabinoid-1 (CB1) receptor. Here, we subjected ICR mice to mTBI and examined the bone response in the skull using microCT. We also measured mast cell degranulation (MCD)72 h post-injury. Finally, we measured brain and calvarial endocannabinoids levels post-mTBI. mTBI led to decreased bone porosity on the contralateral (untouched) side. This effect was apparent both in young and mature mice. Administration of rimonabant (CB1 inverse agonist) completely abrogated the effect of mTBI on calvarial porosity and significantly reduced MCD, compared with vehicle-treated controls. We also found that mTBI resulted in elevated levels of anandamide, but not 2-arachidonoylglycerol, in the contralateral calvarial bone, whereas brain levels remained unchanged. In C57BL/6J CB1 knockout mice, mTBI did not reduce porosity but in general the porosity was significantly lower than in WT controls. Our findings suggest that mTBI induces a strain-specific CB1-dependent bone anabolic response in the skull, probably mediated by anandamide, but seemingly unrelated to inflammation. The endocannabinoid system is therefore a plausible target in management of bone response following head trauma.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31700010 PMCID: PMC6838196 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-51720-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Calvarial porosity (PoV/TV) in the left parietal bone 10 days after mTBI on the right side in 12-week-old (A,B) and 6-week-old (C,D) ICR male mice. (A,C) PoV/TV mean ± SD in 9 animals per group; *p < 0.05 vs. sham-TBI. (B,D) Representative µCT images in the calvaria; ROI is shown as transparent gray; bone marrow spaces are shown in red.
Figure 2Strain-dependent role of CB1 in calvarial porosity at steady-state and following mTBI. Calvarial porosity (PoV/TV) in the left parietal bone 10 days after mTBI on the right side in 12-week old male mice. (A,B) ICR mice treated with Rimonabant or vehicle. (C,D) C57Bl/6J WT and CB1−/− mice. (A) Graphs represent mean ± SD in 6 animals per group. *p = 0.039, vs Sham. (C) Graphs represent mean ± SD in 5 animals per group except n = 8 in the WT sham group. #p = 0.014, KO vs WT, 2-way ANOVA) and (B,D) µCT representative images. Color coded as described in Fig. 1.
Figure 3Effect of rimonabant on dural mast cell degranulation following mTBI. (A) Rimonabant treatment in mTBI animals resulted in a significant reduction in the dural MC degranulation level (n = 4, *p < 0.05 Rimonabant vs Veh, non-parametric Mann-Whitney). (B) Representative images of toluidine blue-stained dural whole-mounts showing degranulated MCs in rimonabant and vehicle-treated mTBI. Black arrows indicate degranulated mast cells.
Figure 4Brain (A) and calvarial bone (B) endocannabinoid levels following mTBI using LC-MS/MS. Data represent mean ± SD in 8–10 mice per group *p < 0.05 versus Sham for each side separately, using Student’s t-test.