| Literature DB >> 31787987 |
Raffaella Parente1, Cristina Sobacchi1,2, Barbara Bottazzi1, Alberto Mantovani1,3,4, Danka Grčevic5,6, Antonio Inforzato1,3.
Abstract
The innate immune system is equipped with a number of germ-line encoded soluble pattern recognition molecules (PRMs) that collectively mediate the humoral host response toEntities:
Keywords: PTX3; osteoblasts; osteoimmunology; pentraxins; periodontitis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31787987 PMCID: PMC6856142 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02628
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
PTX3 in bone homeostasis and experimental disease models.
| Grcevic et al. ( | Mouse | ob & oc | ob & oc differentiation | High PTX3 expression in early ob, but low in oc, differentiation | |
| Trabecular bone, fracture callus | Bone remodeling | Reduced BFR in | |||
| Fracture healing | Reduced callus mineralization in | ||||
| Scimeca et al. ( | Human | Femoral head biopsy, ob | Osteoporosis | Reduced PTX3 expression in ob from osteoporotic patients | |
| ob | Treatment of primary ob from young healthy controls with anti-PTX3 antibody | Altered morphology, reduced RANKL and RUNX2 expression, and reduced mineralization | |||
| Zimmermann et al. ( | Pig | Bone-derived fibroblasts | Exposure to bone-conditioned medium w/o TGF-β receptor antagonist | Increased PTX3 expression, which is reversed by the TGF-β receptor antagonist | |
| Chiellini et al. ( | Human | Multipotent adipose-derived stem cells | Osteogenic and adipogenic induction | Enhanced PTX3 expression as compared to undifferentiated cells, more pronounced during adipogenesis | |
| Lee et al. ( | Human | BM-derived stromal cells | Osteogenic induction ± TNF-α | Increased PTX3 expression and secretion in early, but not late, steps of differentiation; further enhanced by TNF-α | |
| Mouse | BM | LPS-induced bone loss | Higher PTX3 expression in LPS- versus vehicle-treated mice | ||
| ob & oc | ob & oc differentiation & function in the presence of exogenous PTX3 | No effect on oc and ob differentiation; in early ob, increased RUNX2 and RANKL expression | |||
| Keles et al. ( | Rat | Gingival tissue & serum | Ligature-induced experimental periodontitis | PTX3 levels correlate with early, not late, phases of disease | |
| Tsuge et al. ( | Rat | PDL | Orthodontic tooth movement | PTX3 levels increase at early time points | |
| Garcia et al. ( | Mouse | Arthritic joint | STIA | PTX3 levels increase in |
ob, osteoblast; oc, osteoclast; BFR, Bone Formation Rate; BM, Bone Marrow; TGF-β, Transforming Growth Factor-β; PDL, periodontal ligament; STIA, Serum Transfer-Induced Arthritis.
PTX3 in human chronic bone diseases.
| Pradeep et al. ( | GCF & plasma | Gingivitis and periodontitis | PTX3 levels increase during disease progression | |
| Gumus et al. ( | Saliva & serum | Periodontitis | PTX3 levels correlate with periodontal tissue inflammation | |
| Lakshmanan et al. ( | Gingival tissue | Periodontitis | PTX3 concentration is higher in aggressive as compared to chronic periodontitis | |
| Leira et al. ( | Serum | Periodontitis-Chronic Migraine (PD-CM) | Increased PTX3 levels as compared to CM without PD | |
| Temelli et al. ( | Serum | Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) | PTX3 levels positively correlate with periodontal inflamed surface area (PISA) in CAD(-) groups | |
| Leira et al. ( | Serum | Lacunar Infarct (LI) | PTX3 levels positively correlate with PISA in patients with poor prognosis | |
| Surlin et al. ( | GCF | Orthodontic tooth movement | PTX3 levels increase at early time points | |
| Luchetti et al. ( | Synoviocytes | RA & OA | PTX3 levels increase in OA cells upon TNF-α stimulation, while they are constitutively elevated in RA cells | |
| Synovial tissue | RA & OA | High PTX3 immunoreactivity in RA tissue as compared to controls | ||
| Yokota et al. ( | FLS | RA | PTX3 expression is inhibited by simvastatin treatment | |
| Satomura et al. ( | Synoviocytes | RA | PTX3 expression is induced by serum amyloid A | |
| Padeh et al. ( | SF | Juvenile idiopathic arthritis | Higher PTX3 levels associate with disease severity and prognosis | |
| Choi et al. ( | GCC | Advanced gastric cancer | PTX3 expression is induced by TNF-α via NF-kB; PTX3 enhances tumor cell migration and macrophage recruitment | |
| Choi et al. ( | Metastatic tissues | Metastatic breast cancer | Elevated PTX3 expression correlates with poor survival | |
| BM-BCCL | Metastatic breast cancer | High PTX3 levels. PTX3 silencing prevents BM-BCC migration, macrophage chemotaxis, and oc formation |
GCF, gingival crevicular fluid; PDL, Periodontal Ligament; RA, Rheumatoid Arthritis; OA, Osteoarthritis; FLS, Fibroblast-Like Synoviocytes; SF, Synovial Fluid; GCC, Gastric Cancer Cells; BM-BCCL, Bone Metastatic-Breast Cancer Cell line; Oc, osteoclast.
Figure 1Proposed roles of PTX3 in bone homeostasis and fracture healing. In conditions of physiological bone turn-over, PTX3 is expressed by osteoblasts and bone-encased osteocytes, likely contributing to bone deposition via yet unknown mechanisms (24). Following fracture, inflammatory mediators (e.g., IL-6, IL-1β, TNF-α), along with other factors, promote osteoblast development, and differentiation. In these conditions, PTX3 (made by osteochondral progenitor cells, chondrocytes, and osteoblasts) reverses the inhibitory effects exerted by FGF2 on osteoblast differentiation, thereby contributing to matrix mineralization (23). In the late stages of fracture healing, PTX3 likely participates in bone remodeling by stimulating RANKL production and osteoclastogenesis (27).