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Bone Turnover in Wild Type and Pleiotrophin-Transgenic Mice Housed for Three Months in the International Space Station (ISS)

Bone is a complex dynamic tissue undergoing a continuous remodeling process. Gravity is a physical force playing a role in the remodeling and contributing to the maintenance of bone integrity. This article reports an investigation on the alterations of the bone microarchitecture that occurred in wil...

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Autores principales: Tavella, Sara, Ruggiu, Alessandra, Giuliani, Alessandra, Brun, Francesco, Canciani, Barbara, Manescu, Adrian, Marozzi, Katia, Cilli, Michele, Costa, Delfina, Liu, Yi, Piccardi, Federica, Tasso, Roberta, Tromba, Giuliana, Rustichelli, Franco, Cancedda, Ranieri
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3305296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22438896
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033179
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author Tavella, Sara
Ruggiu, Alessandra
Giuliani, Alessandra
Brun, Francesco
Canciani, Barbara
Manescu, Adrian
Marozzi, Katia
Cilli, Michele
Costa, Delfina
Liu, Yi
Piccardi, Federica
Tasso, Roberta
Tromba, Giuliana
Rustichelli, Franco
Cancedda, Ranieri
author_facet Tavella, Sara
Ruggiu, Alessandra
Giuliani, Alessandra
Brun, Francesco
Canciani, Barbara
Manescu, Adrian
Marozzi, Katia
Cilli, Michele
Costa, Delfina
Liu, Yi
Piccardi, Federica
Tasso, Roberta
Tromba, Giuliana
Rustichelli, Franco
Cancedda, Ranieri
author_sort Tavella, Sara
collection PubMed
description Bone is a complex dynamic tissue undergoing a continuous remodeling process. Gravity is a physical force playing a role in the remodeling and contributing to the maintenance of bone integrity. This article reports an investigation on the alterations of the bone microarchitecture that occurred in wild type (Wt) and pleiotrophin-transgenic (PTN-Tg) mice exposed to a near-zero gravity on the International Space Station (ISS) during the Mice Drawer System (MDS) mission, to date, the longest mice permanence (91 days) in space. The transgenic mouse strain over-expressing pleiotrophin (PTN) in bone was selected because of the PTN positive effects on bone turnover. Wt and PTN-Tg control animals were maintained on Earth either in a MDS payload or in a standard vivarium cage. This study revealed a bone loss during spaceflight in the weight-bearing bones of both strains. For both Tg and Wt a decrease of the trabecular number as well as an increase of the mean trabecular separation was observed after flight, whereas trabecular thickness did not show any significant change. Non weight-bearing bones were not affected. The PTN-Tg mice exposed to normal gravity presented a poorer trabecular organization than Wt mice, but interestingly, the expression of the PTN transgene during the flight resulted in some protection against microgravity’s negative effects. Moreover, osteocytes of the Wt mice, but not of Tg mice, acquired a round shape, thus showing for the first time osteocyte space-related morphological alterations in vivo. The analysis of specific bone formation and resorption marker expression suggested that the microgravity-induced bone loss was due to both an increased bone resorption and a decreased bone deposition. Apparently, the PTN transgene protection was the result of a higher osteoblast activity in the flight mice.
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spelling pubmed-33052962012-03-21 Bone Turnover in Wild Type and Pleiotrophin-Transgenic Mice Housed for Three Months in the International Space Station (ISS) Tavella, Sara Ruggiu, Alessandra Giuliani, Alessandra Brun, Francesco Canciani, Barbara Manescu, Adrian Marozzi, Katia Cilli, Michele Costa, Delfina Liu, Yi Piccardi, Federica Tasso, Roberta Tromba, Giuliana Rustichelli, Franco Cancedda, Ranieri PLoS One Research Article Bone is a complex dynamic tissue undergoing a continuous remodeling process. Gravity is a physical force playing a role in the remodeling and contributing to the maintenance of bone integrity. This article reports an investigation on the alterations of the bone microarchitecture that occurred in wild type (Wt) and pleiotrophin-transgenic (PTN-Tg) mice exposed to a near-zero gravity on the International Space Station (ISS) during the Mice Drawer System (MDS) mission, to date, the longest mice permanence (91 days) in space. The transgenic mouse strain over-expressing pleiotrophin (PTN) in bone was selected because of the PTN positive effects on bone turnover. Wt and PTN-Tg control animals were maintained on Earth either in a MDS payload or in a standard vivarium cage. This study revealed a bone loss during spaceflight in the weight-bearing bones of both strains. For both Tg and Wt a decrease of the trabecular number as well as an increase of the mean trabecular separation was observed after flight, whereas trabecular thickness did not show any significant change. Non weight-bearing bones were not affected. The PTN-Tg mice exposed to normal gravity presented a poorer trabecular organization than Wt mice, but interestingly, the expression of the PTN transgene during the flight resulted in some protection against microgravity’s negative effects. Moreover, osteocytes of the Wt mice, but not of Tg mice, acquired a round shape, thus showing for the first time osteocyte space-related morphological alterations in vivo. The analysis of specific bone formation and resorption marker expression suggested that the microgravity-induced bone loss was due to both an increased bone resorption and a decreased bone deposition. Apparently, the PTN transgene protection was the result of a higher osteoblast activity in the flight mice. Public Library of Science 2012-03-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3305296/ /pubmed/22438896 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033179 Text en Tavella et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tavella, Sara
Ruggiu, Alessandra
Giuliani, Alessandra
Brun, Francesco
Canciani, Barbara
Manescu, Adrian
Marozzi, Katia
Cilli, Michele
Costa, Delfina
Liu, Yi
Piccardi, Federica
Tasso, Roberta
Tromba, Giuliana
Rustichelli, Franco
Cancedda, Ranieri
Bone Turnover in Wild Type and Pleiotrophin-Transgenic Mice Housed for Three Months in the International Space Station (ISS)
title Bone Turnover in Wild Type and Pleiotrophin-Transgenic Mice Housed for Three Months in the International Space Station (ISS)
title_full Bone Turnover in Wild Type and Pleiotrophin-Transgenic Mice Housed for Three Months in the International Space Station (ISS)
title_fullStr Bone Turnover in Wild Type and Pleiotrophin-Transgenic Mice Housed for Three Months in the International Space Station (ISS)
title_full_unstemmed Bone Turnover in Wild Type and Pleiotrophin-Transgenic Mice Housed for Three Months in the International Space Station (ISS)
title_short Bone Turnover in Wild Type and Pleiotrophin-Transgenic Mice Housed for Three Months in the International Space Station (ISS)
title_sort bone turnover in wild type and pleiotrophin-transgenic mice housed for three months in the international space station (iss)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3305296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22438896
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033179
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