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Tissue-specific mineralization defects in the periodontium of the Hyp mouse model of X-linked hypophosphatemia

Authors :
Guillaume Falgayrac
Benjamin R. Coyac
Guillaume Penel
Jérémy Sadoine
M Biosse-Duplan
Marc D. McKee
Thorsten Schinke
Claire Bardet
Lotfi Slimani
Catherine Chaussain
Brigitte Baroukh
Agnès Linglart
Source :
Bone. 103
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH) is a dento-osseous disorder caused by inactivating mutations in the PHEX gene, leading to renal phosphate wasting and hypophosphatemia, and impaired mineralization of bones and teeth. In the oral cavity, recent reports suggest a higher susceptibility of XLH patients to periodontitis, where patients present with impaired tooth cementum - a bone-like tissue involved in tooth attachment to the jaw bones and post-eruption tooth positioning - and a higher frequency of intrabony defects. In the present study, the pathobiology of alveolar bone and tooth cementum was investigated in the Hyp mouse, the murine analog of XLH. PHEX deficiency in XLH/Hyp dramatically alters the periodontal phenotype, with hypoplasia of tooth root cementum associated with a lack of periodontal ligament attachment and the presence of an immature apatitic mineral phase of all periodontal mineralized tissues. Challenging the Hyp periodontium in two surgical experimental models - ligature-induced periodontal breakdown and repair, and a model of tooth movement adaptation inducing cementum formation - we show that bone and cementum formation, and their healing, are altered. Bone and cementum mineralization appear similarly disturbed, where hypomineralized pericellular matrix surrounds cells, and where the protein osteopontin (OPN, a mineralization inhibitor) accumulates in a tissue-specific manner, most notably in the perilacunar matrix surrounding osteocytes. Although the pathobiology is different between XLH/Hyp bone and cementum, our results show a major XLH phenotype in oral mineralized tissues consistent with variations in patient susceptibility to periodontal disorders.

Details

ISSN :
18732763
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bone
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b9fb8806a1294ce07b98d376786bc5a1