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Publication : TGF-β signaling in the cranial neural crest affects late-stage mandibular bone resorption and length.

First Author  Houchen CJ Year  2024
Journal  Front Physiol Volume  15
Pages  1435594 PubMed ID  39473613
Mgi Jnum  J:357895 Mgi Id  MGI:7765361
Doi  10.3389/fphys.2024.1435594 Citation  Houchen CJ, et al. (2024) TGF-beta signaling in the cranial neural crest affects late-stage mandibular bone resorption and length. Front Physiol 15:1435594
abstractText  Malocclusions are common craniofacial malformations that cause quality of life and health problems if left untreated. Unfortunately, the current treatment for severe skeletal malocclusion is invasive surgery. Developing improved therapeutic options requires a deeper understanding of the cellular mechanisms responsible for determining jaw bone length. We have recently shown that neural crest mesenchyme (NCM) can alter jaw length by controlling the recruitment and function of mesoderm-derived osteoclasts. Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) signaling is critical to craniofacial development by directing bone resorption and formation, and heterozygous mutations in the TGF-beta type I receptor (TGFBR1) are associated with micrognathia in humans. To identify the role of TGF-beta signaling in NCM in controlling osteoclasts during mandibular development, the mandibles of mouse embryos deficient in the gene encoding Tgfbr1, specifically in NCM, were analyzed. Our laboratory and others have demonstrated that Tgfbr1 (fl/fl) ;Wnt1-Cre mice display significantly shorter mandibles with no condylar, coronoid, or angular processes. We hypothesize that TGF-beta signaling in NCM can also direct late bone remodeling and further regulate late embryonic jaw bone length. Interestingly, analysis of mandibular bone based on micro-computed tomography and Masson's trichrome revealed no significant difference in bone quality between the Tgfbr1 (fl/fl) ;Wnt1-Cre mice and controls, as measured by the bone perimeter/bone area, trabecular rod-like diameter, number and separation, and gene expression of collagen type 1 alpha 1 (Col1alpha1) and matrix metalloproteinase 13 (Mmp13). Although there was not a difference in localization of bone resorption within the mandible indicated by tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) staining, Tgfbr1 (fl/fl) ;Wnt1-Cre mice had approximately three-fold less osteoclast number and perimeter than controls. Gene expression of receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-beta (Rank) and Mmp9, markers of osteoclasts and their activity, also showed a three-fold decrease in Tgfbr1 (fl/fl) ;Wnt1-Cre mandibles. Evaluation of osteoblast-to-osteoclast signaling revealed no significant difference between Tgfbr1 (fl/fl) ;Wnt1-Cre mandibles and controls, leaving the specific mechanism unresolved. Finally, pharmacological inhibition of Tgfbr1 signaling during the initiation of bone mineralization and resorption significantly shortened jaw length in embryos. We conclude that TGF-beta signaling in NCM decreases mesoderm-derived osteoclast number, that TGF-beta signaling in NCM impacts jaw length late in development, and that this osteoblast-to-osteoclast communication may be occurring through an undescribed mechanism.
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