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Modulation of Bone Marrow Primary Cell Osteoblastogenesis and Cell Senescence by Mechanical Stimulation

Abstract

Cell and animal studies conducted onboard the International Space Station and formerly the Shuttle flights have provided groundbreaking data illuminating the deleterious biological response of bone to mechanical unloading. Specifically CDKN1A/p-21 a cell senescence protein, was found to be upregulated in osteoprecursor cells of the femur during 15-day spaceflight, leading to the working hypothesis that CDKN1A/p-21 plays a role in inhibition of bone formation via mechanical regulation. To evaluate this hypothesis, utilizing a p-21 knockout mouse-line and relevant wildtype control, we cultured femoral bone marrow primary cells under unloaded (static) and cyclically stretched loading through a 30 day osteoblastogenesis protocol. Morphologic evaluation of the cultures demonstrated that mechanical stretching aligned the cells and increased the presence of defined focal adhesion expressing talin, integrin v3, and PTK2 protein tyrosine kinase 2, also known as focal adhesion kinase (FAK) in both mouse strains. In corroboration with previous investigations of cell survival signals relation to FAK, our study found that with greater concentration of focal adhesions via stretch stimulation the live cell percentage was significantly higher than the unloaded controls (p-21 knockout line: +49.70%, p*=0.009, wildtype control: +18.14%, p*=.01). Also evaluated was the mineralization and ECM secretion capability of the differentiating cells. Von Kossa staining has shown that in the p-21 knockout cells unloaded cells produce more matrix that the stretch stimulated, however the matrix is unorganized presenting in sporadic nodules covering approximately 30% of the culture area at day 14 (n=6 wells) while the stretch stimulated cultures have less mineralization content the surface area containing mineralized matrix is greater (~68% at day 14). Q-PCR evaluation of the p-21 knockout cells revealed that canonical (-catenin cascade) and non-canonical wnt11 and downstream planar cell polarity (wnt/PCP) pathway molecule RAC1 are prevalently upregulated with mechanical stimulation. Immunofluorescence for -catenin and RAC1 showed co-localization at the nuclear membrane of the p-21 knockout cells but not the wildtype (n=1) suggesting that molecular communication via the canonical and wnt/PCP pathway are initiated by mechanical loading and experience regulation along the signaling cascade by CDKN1A/p-21. Future investigations will further elucidate this relationship and provide causal data demonstrating mechanical loadings modulatory effect on p-21 expression change

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