| Literature DB >> 35145964 |
Yili Xu1, Mei Huang1, Wenzhen He1, Chen He1, Kaixuan Chen1, Jing Hou1, Min Huang1, Yurui Jiao1, Ran Liu1, Nanyu Zou1, Ling Liu1, Changjun Li1,2,3.
Abstract
Heterotopic ossification (HO) is defined as the occurrence of extraskeletal bone in soft tissue. Although this pathological osteogenesis process involves the participation of osteoblasts and osteoclasts during the formation of bone structures, it differs from normal physiological osteogenesis in many features. In this article, the primary characteristics of heterotopic ossification are reviewed from both clinical and basic research perspectives, with a special highlight on the influence of mechanics on heterotopic ossification, which serves an important role in the prophylaxis and treatment of HO.Entities:
Keywords: bone; bone formation; heterotopic ossification; mechanical loading; stem cell fate
Year: 2022 PMID: 35145964 PMCID: PMC8824234 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.770931
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Cells types contributing to heterotopic ossification.
| Study | Cell types | Findings |
|---|---|---|
|
| Tendon-derived progenitor cells (Ctsk-Cre) | Ctsk could label progenitor cells of HO in tendon |
|
| Interstitial/perivascular cells (Gli1-Cre) | Gli1-Cre lineage cells contribute to endochondral HO |
|
| Tendon/periosteum/fascia (Scx-Cre) | Scx-cre lineage cells contribute to trauma-induced and BMP-induced HO |
|
| Endoneurium (Wnt1-CreERT) | PS+ and SP7+ cells from peripheral nerves contribute to HO |
|
| Endothelial/bone marrow/muscle interstitial cells (Mx1-Cre) | Mx1-Cre lineage cells contribute to intramuscular HO |
|
| Mesenchymal progenitor cells (Nfatc1-Cre) | ca-ACVR1fx/WT/Nfatc1-Cre+ mice develop heterotopic ossification |
|
| Mesenchymal progenitor cells (Prx1-Cre; Dermo1-Cre; Ap2-Cre) | Loss of Gnas mice resulted in PHO |
|
| Pericyte/adipocyte/connective tissue interstitium (Glast-CreERT) | Glast-creERT labeled progenitors contribute to HO at all stages |
|
| Endothelium/muscle satellite cells (Tie2-Cre/VE-Cadherin-Cre) | Endothelium/muscle satellite-derived cells contribute to HO |
FIGURE 1Hypothesis of Mechanical Stimulation of HO: Mechanical stress initiates osteogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in soft tissue. Stem cell fate of MSCs shifts from favoring lipogenic cells to osteogenic cells under mechanical loading. According to the published literature about HO, after the mechanical loading, the activations of the YAP/TAZ and mTORC1 pathway enable MSCs to differentiate into osteoblasts, and the decrease in PPARγ expression reduces the differentiation of MSC into adipocytes.
FIGURE 2Signaling pathway of HO due to mechanical stimulation: Mechanical stimulation through mTORC1 leads to an increase in Sirt1 translocation into the nucleus, followed by a decrease in SOST secretion. SOST can bind to LRP5/6 to inhibit β-catenin. Mechanical loading can also activate Runx2/3 gene expression through YAP/TAZ. Thus mechanical stimulation promotes osteogenic gene expression through mTORC1 and YAP/TAZ. Meanwhile, mechanical stimulation can inhibit PPARγ gene expression through the TGF-β pathway, thereby suppressing lipogenic differentiation. These combined effects lead to a stem cell fate shift.