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Autophagy Regulates Craniofacial Bone Acquisition.

Authors :
Thomas, Neil
Choi, Han Kyoung
Wei, Xiaoxi
Wang, Li
Mishina, Yuji
Guan, Jun-Lin
Liu, Fei
Source :
Calcified Tissue International; Nov2019, Vol. 105 Issue 5, p518-530, 13p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Increasing evidence has demonstrated the important role of autophagy in skeletal homeostasis; however, the role of autophagy in craniofacial bone development and acquisition is largely unknown. In this study, we investigated the effect of autophagy suppression on craniofacial bone acquisition by deleting Fip200 or Atg5, two essential autophagy genes, using Osterix-Cre (Osx-Cre). We found that the Osx-Cre transgene mildly decreased the bone mass of parietal bone but not frontal bone, and did not affect cranial base bone mass in adult mice. In the cranial vault, Fip200 or Atg5 deletion similarly decreased 50% bone mass of neural crest-derived frontal bone; Atg5 deletion decreased 50% and Fip200 deletion decreased 30% bone mass of mesoderm-derived parietal bone. In the cranial base, Fip200 or Atg5 deletion similarly decreased 30% bone mass of neural crest-derived presphenoid bone; Atg5 deletion decreased 30% and Fip200 deletion decreased 16% bone mass of mesoderm-derive basioccipital bone. Lastly, we used doxycycline treatment to inhibit the Osx-Cre expression until 2 months of age and showed that postnatal Fip200 deletion led to cranial vault bone mass decrease in association with a small increase in both bone volume/tissue volume and tissue mineral density. Altogether, this study demonstrated the important role of autophagy in craniofacial bone acquisition during development and postnatal growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0171967X
Volume :
105
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Calcified Tissue International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139138509
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00223-019-00593-2