Osteal macrophages promote in vivo intramembranous bone healing in a mouse tibial injury model
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Chang, Ming
Maylin, Erin
Kohler, Thomas
Müller, Ralph
Wu, Andy
Van Rooijen, Nico
Sweet, Matthew
Hume, David
Raggatt, Liza
Pettit, Allison
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Abstract
Bone-lining tissues contain a population of resident macrophages termed osteomacs that interact with osteoblasts in vivo and control mineralization in vitro. The role of osteomacs in bone repair was investigated using a mouse tibial bone injury model that heals primarily through intramembranous ossification and progresses through all major phases of stabilized fracture repair. Immunohistochemical studies revealed that at least two macrophage populations, F4/80 Mac-2 /lowTRACP osteomacs and F4/80 Mac-2hiTRACP inflammatory macrophages, were present within the bone injury site and persisted throughout the healing time course. In vivo depletion of osteomacs/macrophages (either using the Mafia transgenic mouse model or clodronate liposome delivery) or osteoclasts (recombinant osteoprotegerin treatment) established that osteomacs were required for deposition of collagen type 1 (CT1 ) matrix and bone mineralization in the tibial injury model, as assessed by quantitative immunohistology and micro-computed tomography. Conversely, administration of the macrophage growth factor colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1) increased the number of osteomacs/macrophages at the injury site significantly with a concurrent increase in new CT1 matrix deposition and enhanced mineralization. This study establishes osteomacs as participants in intramembranous bone healing and as targets for primary anabolic bone therapies.
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Journal of Bone and Mineral Research
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26
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7
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Biological sciences
Engineering
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Immunology not elsewhere classified