| Literature DB >> 33431521 |
Pranidhi Baddam1, Vivian Biancardi2,3, Daniela M Roth1,3, Farah Eaton1, Claudine Thereza-Bussolaro1,4, Rupasri Mandal5, David S Wishart5, Amy Barr6, Joanna MacLean7,8, Carlos Flores-Mir1, Silvia Pagliardini2, Daniel Graf9,10.
Abstract
Pediatric obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), a relatively common sleep-related breathing disorder (SRBD) affecting approximately 1-5% of children, is often caused by anatomical obstruction and/or collapse of the nasal and/or pharyngeal airways. The resulting sleep disruption and intermittent hypoxia lead to various systemic morbidities. Predicting the development of OSA from craniofacial features alone is currently not possible and a controversy remains if upper airway obstruction facilitates reduced midfacial growth or vice-versa. Currently, there is no rodent model that recapitulates both the development of craniofacial abnormalities and upper airway obstruction to address these questions. Here, we describe that mice with a neural crest-specific deletion of Bmp7 (Bmp7ncko) present with shorter, more acute angled cranial base, midfacial hypoplasia, nasal septum deviation, turbinate swelling and branching defects, and nasal airway obstruction. Interestingly, several of these craniofacial features develop after birth during periods of rapid midfacial growth and precede the development of an upper airway obstruction. We identified that in this rodent model, no single feature appeared to predict upper airway obstruction, but the sum of those features resulted in a reduced breathing frequency, apneas and overall reduced oxygen consumption. Metabolomics analysis of serum from peripheral blood identified increased levels of hydroxyproline, a metabolite upregulated under hypoxic conditions. As this model recapitulates many features observed in OSA, it offers unique opportunities for studying how upper airway obstruction affects breathing physiology and leads to systemic morbidities.Entities:
Keywords: Airway obstruction; Apneas; Bone Morphogenetic Protein 7; Midfacial hypoplasia; Nasal septum deviation; Sleep related breathing disorders; Turbinate hypertrophy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33431521 DOI: 10.1242/dmm.047738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dis Model Mech ISSN: 1754-8403 Impact factor: 5.758