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Publication : Constitutive activation of MEK1 in osteoprogenitors increases strength of bone despite impairing mineralization.

First Author  Fowlkes JL Year  2020
Journal  Bone Volume  130
Pages  115106 PubMed ID  31689526
Mgi Jnum  J:283827 Mgi Id  MGI:6387823
Doi  10.1016/j.bone.2019.115106 Citation  Fowlkes JL, et al. (2020) Constitutive activation of MEK1 in osteoprogenitors increases strength of bone despite impairing mineralization. Bone 130:115106
abstractText  Recent clinical studies have revealed that a somatic mutation in MAP2K1, causing constitutive activation of MEK1 in osteogenic cells, occurs in melorheostotic bone disease in humans. We have generated a mouse model which expresses an activated form of MEK1 (MEK1DD) specifically in osteoprogenitors postnatally. The skeletal phenotype of these mice recapitulates many features of melorheostosis observed in humans, including extra-cortical bone formation, abundant osteoid formation, decreased mineral density, and increased porosity. Paradoxically, in both humans and mice, MEK1 activation in osteoprogenitors results in bone that is not structurally compromised, but is hardened and stronger, which would not be predicted based on tissue and matrix properties. Thus, a specific activating mutation in MEK1, expressed only by osteoprogenitors postnatally, can have a significant impact on bone strength through complex alterations in whole bone geometry, bone micro-structure, and bone matrix.
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