Efficacy of zoledronic acid for the elimination of disseminated tumor cells in a clinically relevant, spontaneously metastatic prostate cancer xenograft model

AUTHORS

Lukas Clemens Böckelmann, Vera Freytag, Ann-Kristin Ahlers, Hanna Maar, Tobias Gosau, Anke Baranowsky, Rüdiger Schmitz, Klaus Pantel, Udo Schumacher, Marie-Therese Haider, Tobias Lange

ABSTRACT

Bone metastases develop in >90 % of patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer (PCa) through complex interactions between the bone microenvironment and tumor cells. Previous androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT), which is known to cause bone loss, as well as anti-resorptive agents such as zoledronic acid (ZA), used to prevent skeletal complications, may influence these interactions and thereby the growth of disseminated tumor cells (DTC) in the bone marrow (BM). Here, a spontaneously metastatic xenograft tumor model of human PCa was further optimized to mimic the common clinical situation of ADT (castration) combined with primary tumor resection in vivo. The effects of these interventions, alone or in combination with ZA treatment, on tumor cell dissemination to the BM and other distant sites were analyzed. Metastatic burden was quantified by human-specific Alu-qPCR, bioluminescence imaging (BLI), and immunohistochemistry. Further, bone remodeling was assessed by static histomorphometry and serum parameters. Initial comparative analysis between NSG and SCID mice showed that spontaneous systemic dissemination of subcutaneous PC-3 xenograft tumors was considerably enhanced in NSG mice. Primary tumor resection and thereby prolonged observational periods resulted in a higher overall metastatic cell load at necropsy and tumor growth alone caused significant bone loss, which was further augmented by surgical castration. In addition, castrated mice showed a strong trend towards higher bone metastasis loads. Weekly treatment of mice with ZA completely prevented castration- and tumor-induced bone loss but had no effect on bone metastasis burden. Conversely, the total lung metastasis load as determined by BLI was significantly decreased upon ZA treatment. These findings provide a basis for future research on the role of ZA not only in preventing skeletal complications but also in reducing metastasis to other organs.

High-glutathione mesenchymal stem cells isolated using the FreSHtracer probe enhance cartilage regeneration in a rabbit chondral defect model

AUTHORS

Gun Hee Cho, Hyun Cheol Bae, Won Young Cho, Eui Man Jeong, Hee Jung Park, Ha Ru Yang, Sun Young Wang, You Jung Kim, Dong Myung Shin, Hyung Min Chung, In Gyu Kim & Hyuk-Soo Han

ABSTRACT

Background

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are a promising cell source for cartilage regeneration. However, the function of MSC can vary according to cell culture conditions, donor age, and heterogeneity of the MSC population, resulting in unregulated MSC quality control. To overcome these limitations, we previously developed a fluorescent real-time thiol tracer (FreSHtracer) that monitors cellular levels of glutathione (GSH), which are known to be closely associated with stem cell function. In this study, we investigated whether using FreSHtracer could selectively separate high-functioning MSCs based on GSH levels and evaluated the chondrogenic potential of MSCs with high GSH levels to repair cartilage defects in vivo.

Methods

Flow cytometry was conducted on FreSHtracer-loaded MSCs to select cells according to their GSH levels. To determine the function of FreSHtracer-isolated MSCs, mRNA expression, migration, and CFU assays were conducted. The MSCs underwent chondrogenic differentiation, followed by analysis of chondrogenic-related gene expression. For in vivo assessment, MSCs with different cellular GSH levels or cell culture densities were injected in a rabbit chondral defect model, followed by histological analysis of cartilage-regenerated defect sites.

Results

FreSHtracer successfully isolated MSCs according to GSH levels. MSCs with high cellular GSH levels showed enhanced MSC function, including stem cell marker mRNA expression, migration, CFU, and oxidant resistance. Regardless of the stem cell tissue source, FreSHtracer selectively isolated MSCs with high GSH levels and high functionality. The in vitro chondrogenic potential was the highest in pellets generated by MSCs with high GSH levels, with increased ECM formation and chondrogenic marker expression. Furthermore, the MSCs’ function was dependent on cell culture conditions, with relatively higher cell culture densities resulting in higher GSH levels. In vivo, improved cartilage repair was achieved by articular injection of MSCs with high levels of cellular GSH and MSCs cultured under high-density conditions, as confirmed by Collagen type 2 IHC, Safranin-O staining and O’Driscoll scores showing that more hyaline cartilage was formed on the defects.

Conclusion

FreSHtracer selectively isolates highly functional MSCs that have enhanced in vitro chondrogenesis and in vivo hyaline cartilage regeneration, which can ultimately overcome the current limitations of MSC therapy.

Prenatal vitamin D supplementation mitigates inflammation-related alveolar remodeling in neonatal mice

AUTHORS

Julia Waiden, Motaharehsadat Heydarian, Prajakta Oak, Markus Koschlig, Nona Kamgari, Michael Hagemann, Matthias Wjst, and Anne Hilgendorff

ABSTRACT

The development of chronic lung disease in the neonate, also known as bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), is the most common long-term complication in prematurely born infants. In BPD, the disease-characteristic inflammatory response culminates in nonreversible remodeling of the developing gas exchange area, provoked by the impact of postnatal treatments such as mechanical ventilation (MV) and oxygen treatment. To evaluate the potential of prenatal treatment regimens to modulate this inflammatory response and thereby impact the vulnerability of the lung towards postnatal injury, we designed a multilayered preclinical mouse model. After administration of either prenatal vitamin D enriched (VitD+; 1,500 IU/g food) or deprived (VitD-; <10 IU/Kg) food during gestation in C57B6 mice (the onset of mating until birth), neonatal mice were exposed to hyperoxia (FiO2=0.4) with or without MV for 8h at day 5-7 of life, whereas controls spontaneously breathed room air. Prenatal vitamin D supplementation resulted in a decreased number of monocytes/macrophages in the neonatal lung undergoing postnatal injury together with reduced TGF-β pathway activation. In consequence, neonatal mice that received a VitD+ diet during gestation demonstrated less ECM remodeling upon lung injury, reflected by the reduction of pulmonary α-smooth muscle actin-positive fibroblasts, decreased collagen and elastin deposition, and lower amounts of interstitial tissue in the lung periphery. In conclusion, our findings support strategies that attempt to prevent vitamin D insufficiency during pregnancy as they could impact lung health in the offspring by mitigating inflammatory changes in neonatal lung injury and ameliorating subsequent. remodeling of the developing gas exchange area.

JMJD3 ablation in myeloid cells confers renoprotection in mice with DOCA/salt-induced hypertension

AUTHORS

Ying Gao, Wenqiang Yu, Jinfang Song, Jiayi Nie, Zichan Cui, Shihong Wen, Benquan Liu & Hua Liang

ABSTRACT

Hypertension-induced renal injury is characterized by robust inflammation and tubulointerstitial fibrosis. Jumonji domain containing-3 (JMJD3) is closely linked with inflammatory response and fibrogenesis. Here we examined the effect of myeloid JMJD3 ablation on kidney inflammation and fibrosis in deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)/salt hypertension. Our results showed that JMJD3 is notably induced in the kidneys with hypertensive injury. DOCA/salt stress causes an elevation in blood pressure that was no difference between myeloid specific JMJD3-deficient mice and wild-type control mice. Compared with wild-type control mice, myeloid JMJD3 ablation ameliorated kidney function and injury of mice in response to DOCA/salt challenge. Myeloid JMJD3 ablation attenuated collagen deposition, extracellular matrix proteins expression, and fibroblasts activation in injured kidneys following DOCA/salt treatment. Furthermore, myeloid JMJD3 ablation blunts inflammatory response in injured kidneys after DOCA/salt stress. Finally, myeloid JMJD3 ablation precluded myeloid myofibroblasts activation and protected against macrophages to myofibroblasts transition in injured kidneys. These beneficial effects were accompanied by reduced expression of interferon regulator factor 4. In summary, JMJD3 ablation in myeloid cells reduces kidney inflammation and fibrosis in DOCA salt-induced hypertension. Inhibition of myeloid JMJD3 may be a novel potential therapeutic target for hypertensive nephropathy.

Engineering 3D-Printed Strontium-Titanium Scaffold-Integrated Highly Bioactive Serum Exosomes for Critical Bone Defects by Osteogenesis and Angiogenesis

AUTHORS

Hao Liu, Ranli Gu, Wei Li, Lijun Zeng, Yuan Zhu, Boon Chin Heng, Yunsong Liu, and Yongsheng Zhou

ABSTRACT

Currently, healing of large bone defects faces significant challenges such as a bulk of bone regeneration and revascularization on the bone defect region. Here, a “cell-free scaffold engineering” strategy that integrates strontium (Sr) and highly bioactive serum exosomes (sEXOs) inside a three-dimensional (3D)-printed titanium (Ti) scaffold (Sc) is first developed. The constructed SrTi Sc can serve as a sophisticated biomaterial platform for maintaining bone morphological characteristics of the radius during the period of critical bone defect (CBD) repair and further accelerating bone formation and fibroblastic suppression via the controlled release of Sr from the superficial layer of the scaffold. Moreover, compared with sEXO from healthy donors, the sEXO extracted from the serum of the femoral fracture rabbit model at the stage of fracture healing, named BF EXO, is robustly capable of facilitating osteogenesis and angiogenesis. In addition, the underlying therapeutic mechanism is elucidated, whereby altering miRNAs shuttled by BF EXO enables osteogenesis and angiogenesis. Further, the in vivo study revealed that the SrTi Sc + BF EXO composite dramatically accelerated bone repair via osteoconduction, osteoinduction, and revascularization in radial CBD of rabbits. This study broadens the source and biomedical potential of specifically functionalized exosomes and provides a comprehensive clinically feasible strategy for therapeutics on large bone defects.

Do bone elasticity and postmortem interval affect forensic fractographic analyses?

AUTHORS

Jessica Skinner, Natalie Langley, Malin Joseph, James Herrick, Robert Brown, Brian Waletzki, Peter Goguen Dipl, Loukham Shyamsunder, Subramaniam Rajan

ABSTRACT

Forensic fractographic features of bone reliably establish crack propagation in perimortem injuries. We investigated if similar fracture surface features characterize postmortem fractures. Experimentally induced peri- and postmortem fractures were used to assess if fractographic features vary as bone elasticity decreases during the postmortem interval (PMI). Thirty-seven unembalmed, defleshed human femoral shafts from males and females aged 33–81 years were fractured at varying PMIs with a drop test frame using a three-point bending setup and recorded with a high-speed camera. Vital statistics, cause of death, PMI length, temperature, humidity, collagen percentage, water loss, fracture energy, and fractography scores were recorded for each sample. Results showed that fractographic features associated with perimortem fractures were expressed in PMIs up to 40,600 accumulated degree hours (ADH), or 60 warm weather days. Hackle was the most consistently expressed feature, occurring in all fractures regardless of ADH. The most variable characteristics were wake features (78.4%) and arrest ridges (70.3%). Collagen percentage did not correlate strongly with ADH (r = −0.04, p = 0.81); however, there was a strong significant correlation between ADH and water loss (r = 0.74, p < 0.001). Multinomial logistic regression showed no association between fractographic feature expression and ADH or collagen percentage. In conclusion, forensic fractographic features reliably determine initiation and directionality of crack propagation in experimentally induced PMIs up to 40,600 ADH, demonstrating the utility of this method into the recent postmortem interval. This expression of reliable fractographic features throughout the early PMI intimates these characteristics may not be useful standalone features for discerning peri- versus postmortem fractures.