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ABSTRACT: Background
Heterotopic ossification (HO) affects the majority of combat-related lower extremity wounds involving severe fracture and amputation. Defining the timing of early osteogenic-related genes may help identify candidate prophylactic agents and guide the timing of prophylactic therapy after blast and other combat-related extremity injuries.Questions/purposes
Using a recently developed animal model of combat-related HO, we sought to determine (1) the timing of early chondrogenesis, cartilage formation, and radiographic ectopic bone development; and (2) the early cartilage and bone-related gene and protein patterns in traumatized soft tissue.Methods
We used an established rat HO model consisting of blast exposure, controlled femur fracture, crush injury, and transfemoral amputation through the zone of injury. Postoperatively, rats were euthanized on Days 3 to 28. We assessed evidence of early ectopic bone formation by micro-CT and histology and performed proteomic and gene expression analysis.Results
All rats showed radiographic evidence of HO within 28 days. Key chondrogenic (collagen type I alpha 1 [COL1?1], p = 0.016) and osteogenic-related genes (Runt-related transcription factor 2 [RUNX-2], p = 0.029; osteoclacin [OCN], p = 0.032; phosphate-regulating neutral endopeptidase, X-linked [PHEX], p = 0.0290, and POU domain class 5 transcription factor [POU5F], p = 0.016) and proteins (Noggin [NOG], p = 0.04, OCN, p = 0.02, RUNX- 2, p = 0.04, and substance P-1 [SP-1], p = 0.01) in the injured soft tissue, normalized to the contralateral limb and/or sham-treated naïve rats, increased on Days 3 to 14 postinjury. By 14 days, foci of hypertrophic chondrocytes, hyaline cartilage, and woven bone were present in the soft tissue surrounding the amputation site.Conclusions
We found that genes that regulate early chondrogenic and osteogenic signaling and bone development (COL1?1, RUNX-2, OCN, PHEX, and POU5F1) are induced early during the tissue reparative/healing phase in a rat model simulating a combat-related extremity injury.Clinical relevance
The ability to correlate molecular events with histologic and morphologic changes will assist researchers and clinicians to understand HO and hence formulate therapeutic interventions.
SUBMITTER: Qureshi AT
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4523528 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Sep
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Clinical orthopaedics and related research 20150901 9
<h4>Background</h4>Heterotopic ossification (HO) affects the majority of combat-related lower extremity wounds involving severe fracture and amputation. Defining the timing of early osteogenic-related genes may help identify candidate prophylactic agents and guide the timing of prophylactic therapy after blast and other combat-related extremity injuries.<h4>Questions/purposes</h4>Using a recently developed animal model of combat-related HO, we sought to determine (1) the timing of early chondrog ...[more]