4.6 Article

Mkx-Deficient Mice Exhibit Hedgehog Signaling-Dependent Ectopic Ossification in the Achilles Tendons

Journal

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
Volume 34, Issue 3, Pages 557-569

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jbmr.3630

Keywords

BONE; GENETIC ANIMAL MODEL; HEDGEHOG; MKX; MOUSE; OSSIFICATION; SCX; SIGNALING; TENDON

Funding

  1. NIHNational Institute ofDental and Craniofacial Research (NIH/NIDCR) [R01 DE027046]
  2. Shriners Hospitals for Children [85900]

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Heterotopic ossification is the abnormal formation of mineralized bone in skin, muscle, tendon, or other soft tissues. Tendon ossification often occurs from acute tendon injury or chronic tendon degeneration, for which current treatment relies heavily on surgical removal of the ectopic bony tissues. Unfortunately, surgery creates additional trauma, which often causes recurrence of heterotopic ossification. The molecular mechanisms of heterotopic ossification are not well understood. Previous studies demonstrate that Mkx is a transcription factor crucial for postnatal tendon fibril growth. Here we report that Mkx(-/-) mutant mice exhibit ectopic ossification in the Achilles tendon within 1 month after birth and the tendon ossification deteriorates with age. Genetic lineage labeling revealed that the tendon ossification in Mkx(-/-) mice resulted from aberrant differentiation of tendon progenitor cells. Furthermore, tissue-specific inactivation of Mkx in tendon cells postnatally resulted in a similar ossification phenotype, indicating that Mkx plays a key role in tendon tissue homeostasis. Moreover, we show that Hedgehog signaling is ectopically activated at early stages of tendon ossification and that tissue-specific inactivation of Smoothened, which encodes the obligatory transducer of Hedgehog signaling, in the tendon cell lineage prevented or dramatically reduced tendon ossification in Mkx(-/-) mice. Together, these studies establish a new genetic mouse model of tendon ossification and provide new insight into its pathogenic mechanisms. (c) 2018 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.

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