FUNCTIONAL ROLE OF TNF-ALPHA CYTOKINES IN BONE REPAIR
Project Number5R01AR047045-02
Contact PI/Project LeaderGERSTENFELD, LOUIS CHARLES
Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
DESCRIPTION (Adapted from the Investigator's Abstract): Bone repair after
injury or surgery is a specialized type of wound repair response in which bone
is regenerated for the purpose of supporting mechanical loads. While the
process of bone repair is usually considered to be biologically optimal, the
healing of five to ten percent of the estimated 6.2 million fractures occurring
annually in the United States is delayed or impaired. Thus, to reduce the
morbidity associated with fractures, and to provide better control over the
healing responses associated with other reconstructive orthopedic procedures,
an improved understanding of the biology of bone healing is required. Numerous
studies have focused on cytokines as mediators of skeletal repair. Cytokines
can be grouped into three subfamilies: cysteine-knot growth factors, helical
cytokines and tumor necrosis factors. The tumor necrosis factors (TNF) family
of cytokines has been shown to be essential in the mediation of bone
remodeling. We have demonstrated that transgenic mice deficient in both the p55
and p75 TNF-alpha receptors show delayed bone repair, an absence of
intramembranous bone formation but enhanced endochondral bone formation and a
failure in the removal of endochondral cartilage. The central hypothesis of
this proposal is that TNF-alpha provides key regulatory signals that control
the resorption of calcified cartilage and regulates the progression of
osteogenesis during of endochondral skeletal tissue repair. The goal of this
proposal is to determine the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which
TNF-alpha mediates these functions in bone repair. Aim 1 addresses two
interrelated goals. The first is to define how key biological processes and
cellular functions are altered in the absence of both receptors during fracture
repair. Rates and amounts of skeletal cell differentiation and maturation,
rates of cellular proliferation and apoptosis, processes of tissue resorption,
and processes of tissue vascularization will be assessed at cellular and
molecular levels in vivo. The second goal of Aim 1 is to define the functional
roles of the individual TNF-alpha receptors (p55 or p75) during bone repair, by
assessing fracture repair in transgenic mice in which these receptors have been
separately ablated. Aim 2 has two goals. The first is to define the molecular
mechanisms by which TNF-alpha mediates hypertrophic chondrocyte apoptosis. The
second goal is to determine the molecular mechanisms by which TNF-alpha
functions as a central paracrine/autocrine factor that is regulating the
progression of mesenchymal cell differentiation into osteogenic or chondrogenic
cells.
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
CFDA Code
846
DUNS Number
604483045
UEI
FBYMGMHW4X95
Project Start Date
15-May-2001
Project End Date
28-February-2005
Budget Start Date
01-March-2002
Budget End Date
28-February-2003
Project Funding Information for 2002
Total Funding
$285,250
Direct Costs
$175,000
Indirect Costs
$110,250
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2002
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
$285,250
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
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