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rBMP Represses Wnt Signaling and Influences Skeletal Progenitor Cell Fate Specification During Bone Repair
Authors
Akiyama
Armstrong
+70 more
Baker
Bell
Bouxsein
Chen
Collin
Colnot
Cook
de Crombrugghe
Diefenderfer
Diefenderfer
Dimitriou
Ducy
Engstrand
Farber
Friedlaender
Fuentealba
Gaur
Gautschi
Gerhart
Goldring
Govender
Hall
Haynesworth
James
Jeppsson
Jho
Jones
Kamiya
Kanatani
Kanayama
Karsenty
Kim
Kobayashi
Komori
Lanske
Leucht
Leucht
Leucht
Liu
Lustig
Modder
Mundlos
Oni
Osyczka
Pogue
Retting
Rodda
Sacco
Salkeld
Sato
Schmidl
Semenov
Sen
St-Jacques
Taipaleenmaki
ten Berge
ten Dijke
Thompson
Urist
Urist
Vaes
Vortkamp
Wada
Welch
Williams
Winkler
Yamamoto
Yu
Zellin
Zhang
Publication date
Publisher
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) participate in multiple stages of the fetal skeletogenic program from promoting cell condensation to regulating chondrogenesis and bone formation through endochondral ossification. Here, we show that these pleiotropic functions are recapitulated when recombinant BMPs are used to augment skeletal tissue repair. In addition to their well-documented ability to stimulate chondrogenesis in a skeletal injury, we show that recombinant BMPs (rBMPs) simultaneously suppress the differentiation of skeletal progenitor cells in the endosteum and bone marrow cavity to an osteoblast lineage. Both the prochondrogenic and antiosteogenic effects are achieved because rBMP inhibits endogenous β-catenin-dependent Wnt signaling. In the injured periosteum, this repression of Wnt activity results in sox9 upregulation; consequently, cells in the injured periosteum adopt a chondrogenic fate. In the injured endosteum, rBMP also inhibits Wnt signaling, which results in the runx2 and collagen type I downregulation; consequently, cells in this region fail to differentiate into osteoblasts. In muscle surrounding the skeletal injury site, rBMP treatment induces Smad phosphorylation followed by exuberant cell proliferation, an increase in alkaline phosphatase activity, and chondrogenic differentiation. Thus different populations of adult skeletal progenitor cells interpret the same rBMP stimulus in unique ways, and these responses mirror the pleiotropic effects of BMPs during fetal skeletogenesis. These mechanistic insights may be particularly useful for optimizing the reparative potential of rBMPs while simultaneously minimizing their adverse outcomes. © 2010 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research
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Last time updated on 03/12/2019