Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, 1215 21st Ave. South, Suite 4200 MCE, South Tower, Nashville, TN, 37232, USA.
Department of Pharmacology, Vanderbilt University, 2200 Pierce Ave, Robinson Research Building, Nashville, TN, 37232, USA.
Calcif Tissue Int. 2019 Apr;104(4):411-425. doi: 10.1007/s00223-018-0502-5. Epub 2018 Dec 4.
Heterotopic ossification (HO), or the pathologic formation of bone within soft tissues, is a significant complication following severe injuries as it impairs joint motion and function leading to loss of the ability to perform activities of daily living and pain. While soft tissue injury is a prerequisite of developing HO, the exact molecular pathology leading to trauma-induced HO remains unknown. Through prior investigations aimed at identifying the causative factors of HO, it has been suggested that additional predisposing factors that favor ossification within the injured soft tissues environment are required. Considering that chondrocytes and osteoblasts initiate physiologic bone formation by depositing nanohydroxyapatite crystal into their extracellular environment, we investigated the hypothesis that deposition of nanohydroxyapatite within damaged skeletal muscle is likewise sufficient to predispose skeletal muscle to HO. Using a murine model genetically predisposed to nanohydroxyapatite deposition (ABCC6-deficient mice), we observed that following a focal muscle injury, nanohydroxyapatite was robustly deposited in a gene-dependent manner, yet resolved via macrophage-mediated regression over 28 days post injury. However, if macrophage-mediated regression was inhibited, we observed persistent nanohydroxyapatite that was sufficient to drive the formation of HO in 4/5 mice examined. Together, these results revealed a new paradigm by suggesting the persistent nanohydroxyapatite, referred to clinically as dystrophic calcification, and HO may be stages of a pathologic continuum, and not discrete events. As such, if confirmed clinically, these findings support the use of early therapeutic interventions aimed at preventing nanohydroxyapatite as a strategy to evade HO formation.
异位骨化(HO),或在软组织中形成病理性骨,是严重损伤后的一个严重并发症,因为它会损害关节运动和功能,导致丧失日常生活活动能力和疼痛。虽然软组织损伤是形成 HO 的前提,但导致创伤后 HO 的确切分子病理学仍然未知。通过先前旨在确定 HO 致病因素的研究,人们认为需要有其他有利于受伤软组织环境中骨化的潜在诱发因素。考虑到软骨细胞和成骨细胞通过将纳米羟磷灰石晶体沉积到其细胞外环境中来启动生理性骨形成,我们研究了这样一种假设,即在受损的骨骼肌中沉积纳米羟磷灰石同样足以使骨骼肌易患 HO。使用一种遗传上易于纳米羟磷灰石沉积的小鼠模型(ABCC6 缺陷小鼠),我们观察到,在局灶性肌肉损伤后,纳米羟磷灰石以基因依赖性方式强烈沉积,但通过巨噬细胞介导的 28 天损伤后消退得以解决。然而,如果抑制巨噬细胞介导的消退,我们观察到持续的纳米羟磷灰石足以在检查的 4/5 只小鼠中引起 HO 的形成。总之,这些结果揭示了一个新的范式,表明持续的纳米羟磷灰石,临床上称为营养不良性钙化,和 HO 可能是病理连续体的阶段,而不是离散事件。因此,如果在临床上得到证实,这些发现支持早期治疗干预以防止纳米羟磷灰石的使用,作为避免 HO 形成的策略。