|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : NFAT restricts osteochondroma formation from entheseal progenitors.

First Author  Ge X Year  2016
Journal  JCI Insight Volume  1
Issue  4 Pages  e86254
PubMed ID  27158674 Mgi Jnum  J:290980
Mgi Id  MGI:6442286 Doi  10.1172/jci.insight.86254
Citation  Ge X, et al. (2016) NFAT restricts osteochondroma formation from entheseal progenitors. JCI Insight 1(4):e86254
abstractText  Osteochondromas are common benign osteocartilaginous tumors in children and adolescents characterized by cartilage-capped bony projections on the surface of bones. These tumors often cause pain, deformity, fracture, and musculoskeletal dysfunction, and they occasionally undergo malignant transformation. The pathogenesis of osteochondromas remains poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that nuclear factor of activated T cells c1 and c2 (NFATc1 and NFATc2) suppress osteochondromagenesis through individual and combinatorial mechanisms. In mice, conditional deletion of NFATc1 in mesenchymal limb progenitors, Scleraxis-expressing (Scx-expressing) tendoligamentous cells, or postnatally in Aggrecan-expressing cells resulted in osteochondroma formation at entheses, the insertion sites of ligaments and tendons onto bone. Combinatorial deletion of NFATc1 and NFATc2 gave rise to larger and more numerous osteochondromas in inverse proportion to gene dosage. A population of entheseal NFATc1- and Aggrecan-expressing cells was identified as the osteochondroma precursor, previously believed to be growth plate derived or perichondrium derived. Mechanistically, we show that NFATc1 restricts the proliferation and chondrogenesis of osteochondroma precursors. In contrast, NFATc2 preferentially inhibits chondrocyte hypertrophy and osteogenesis. Together, our findings identify and characterize a mechanism of osteochondroma formation and suggest that regulating NFAT activity is a new therapeutic approach for skeletal diseases characterized by defective or exaggerated osteochondral growth.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

20 Bio Entities

0 Expression