Abstract

BackgroundAlthough the capacity of exogenous PTH1-34 to enhance the rate of bone repair is well established in animal models, our understanding of the mechanism(s) whereby PTH induces an anabolic response during skeletal repair remains limited. Furthermore it is unknown whether endogenous PTH is required for fracture healing and how the absence of endogenous PTH would influence the fracture-healing capacity of exogenous PTH.Methodology/Principal FindingsClosed mid-diaphyseal femur fractures were created and stabilized with an intramedullary pin in 8-week-old wild-type and Pth null (Pth −/−) mice. Mice received daily injections of vehicle or of PTH1-34 (80 µg/kg) for 1–4 weeks post-fracture, and callus tissue properties were analyzed at 1, 2 and 4 weeks post-fracture. Cartilaginous callus areas were reduced at 1 week post-fracture, but were increased at 2 weeks post-fracture in vehicle-treated and PTH-treated Pth −/− mice compared to vehicle-treated and PTH-treated wild-type mice respectively. The mineralized callus areas, bony callus areas, osteoblast number and activity, osteoclast number and surface in callus tissues were all reduced in vehicle-treated and PTH-treated Pth −/− mice compared to vehicle-treated and PTH-treated wild-type mice, but were increased in PTH-treated wild-type and Pth −/− mice compared to vehicle-treated wild-type and Pth −/− mice.Conclusions/SignificanceAbsence of endogenous PTH1-84 impedes bone fracture healing. Exogenous PTH1-34 can act in the absence of endogenous PTH but callus formation, including accelerated endochondral bone formation and callus remodeling as well as mechanical strength of the bone are greater when endogenous PTH is present. Results of this study suggest a complementary role for endogenous PTH1-84 and exogenous PTH1-34 in accelerating fracture healing.

Highlights

  • The major form of bioactive parathyroid hormone (PTH) secreted by the parathyroid glands is an 84-amino acid peptide

  • Our study demonstrates that deficiency of endogenous PTH impairs the fracture repair process, by reducing cartilaginous and bony callus formation with down-regulation of osteoblastic gene and protein expression, and reduction of endochondral bone formation, osteoblastic bone formation and osteoclastic bone resorption

  • These results indicate that endogenous PTH plays an important role in fracture healing

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Summary

Introduction

The major form of bioactive parathyroid hormone (PTH) secreted by the parathyroid glands is an 84-amino acid peptide. Endogenous PTH1-84, is classically believed to function as a bone resorbing hormone to maintain calcium homeostasis, endogenous PTH has a critical role to play in the development and maintenance of trabecular bone mass, in the fetus and the neonate. We previous demonstrated this skeletal anabolic role for endogenous PTH1-84 using a genetic approach [1,2].

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