Novel and rapid osteoporosis model established in zebrafish using high iron stress.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2018 Jan 03;:
Authors: Zhang W, Xu J, Qiu J, Xing C, Li X, Leng B, Su Y, Lin J, Lin J, Mei X, Huang Y, Meng A, Pan Y, Xue Y
Abstract
Osteoporosis is a global public health concern and, it can result from numerous pathogenic mechanisms, many of which are closely related with age, nutritional disorders, endocrine imbalance, or adverse drug side effects presented by glucocorticoids, heparin, and anti-epileptics. Given its wide range etiologies, it is crucial to establish an animal model of osteoporosis for use in screening potential drugs quickly and effectively. Previous research has reported that an accumulation of elevated iron in the body is an independent risk factor for osteoporosis. As such, we sought to use both zebrafish larvae and adults to model an osteoporosis phenotype using high iron stress (FAC, ferric ammonium citrate). Skeletal staining results suggested that iron-overload caused a significant decrease in bone calcification as well as severe developmental cartilage defects. In addition, osteoblast and cartilage-specific mRNA expression levels were downregulated after exposure to a high-iron environment. Most importantly, we demonstrated in both larval and adult fish that high iron-induced osteogenic defects were significantly rescued using alendronate (AL), a drug known to be effective against to human osteoporosis. Even more, the repair effect of AL was achieved by facilitating osteoblast differentiation and targeting Bmp signaling. Taken together, our findings propose an rapid and effective osteoporosis model, which could be used widely for future osteoporosis drug screening.
PMID: 29305866 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
from #AlexandrosSfakianakis via Alexandros G.Sfakianakis on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2CzAf1B
via IFTTT
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου