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Publication : Mechanical signals promote osteogenic fate through a primary cilia-mediated mechanism.

First Author  Chen JC Year  2016
Journal  FASEB J Volume  30
Issue  4 Pages  1504-11
PubMed ID  26675708 Mgi Jnum  J:230889
Mgi Id  MGI:5766420 Doi  10.1096/fj.15-276402
Citation  Chen JC, et al. (2016) Mechanical signals promote osteogenic fate through a primary cilia-mediated mechanism. FASEB J 30(4):1504-11
abstractText  It has long been suspected, but never directly shown, that bone formed to accommodate an increase in mechanical loading is related to the creation of osteoblasts from skeletal stem cells. Indeed, biophysical stimuli potently regulate osteogenic lineage commitmentin vitro In this study, we transplanted bone marrow cells expressing green fluorescent protein, to enable lineage tracing, and subjected mice to a biophysical stimulus, to elicit a bone-forming response. We detected cells derived from transplanted progenitors embedded within the bone matrix near active bone-forming surfaces in response to loading, demonstrating for the first time, that mechanical signals enhance the homing and attachment of bone marrow cells to bone surfaces and the commitment to an osteogenic lineage of these cellsin vivo Furthermore, we used an inducible Cre/Lox recombination system to delete kinesin family member 3A (Kif3a), a gene that is essential for primary cilia formation, at will in transplanted cells and their progeny, regardless of which tissue may have incorporated them. Disruption of the mechanosensing organelle, the primary cilium in a progenitor population, significantly decreased the amount of bone formed in response to mechanical stimulation. The collective results of our study directly demonstrate that, in a novel experimental stem cell mechanobiology model, mechanical signals enhance osteogenic lineage commitmentin vivoand that the primary cilium contributes to this process.-Chen, J. C., Hoey, D. A., Chua, M., Bellon, R., Jacobs, C. R. Mechanical signals promote osteogenic fate through a primary cilia-mediated mechanism.
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