Abstract

Bone regeneration is a delicate physiological process. Non-union and delayed fracture healing remains a great challenge in clinical practice nowadays. Bone and fat hold a close relationship to remain balanced through hormones and cytokines. Adiponectin is a well-known protein to maintain the hemostasis, which may be an interesting target for fracture healing. Herein, we provided a facile and efficient method to obtain high-purity and high-yield recombinant human adiponectin (ADPN). The biocompatibility and the pharmaceutical behaviors were evaluated in Sprague–Dawley rats. The paracrine effects of adiponectin on bone fracture healing were investigated with a rat tibia fracture model via intrabone injection. Significantly accelerated bone healing was observed in the medulla injection group, indicating the paracrine effects of adiponectin could be potentially utilized for clinical treatments. The underlying mechanism was primarily assessed, and the expression of osteogenic markers, including bone morphogenic protein 2, alkaline phosphatase, and osteocalcin, along with adiponectin receptor 1 (AdipoR1), was markedly increased at the fracture site. The increased bone healing of ADPN treatment may result from both enhanced osteogenic proliferation as well as differentiation. Cell experiments confirmed that the expression of osteogenesis markers increased significantly in ADPN treatment groups, while it decreased when the expression of AdipoR1 was knocked down by siRNA. Our study provided a feasible and efficacious way for bone fracture treatment with local administration of ADPN, which could be rapidly translated into the clinics.

Highlights

  • Bone regeneration is a delicate and complex physiological process (Clarke, 2008)

  • Glutamine synthetase (GS), methionine sulfoximine (MSX), Chinese hamster ovary K1 (CHO-K1) cells, Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium (DMEM), fetal bovine serum (FBS), penicillin/streptomycin (P/S), insulin, and pentobarbital sodium were supplied by Sigma-Aldrich

  • Two-way sequencing results confirmed that the sequence of inserted gene was identical to human globular adiponectin gene

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Summary

Introduction

Bone regeneration is a delicate and complex physiological process (Clarke, 2008). Bone defects resulted from traumatic injury, tumor resection, and degenerative diseases are challenging problems in clinics (Burge et al, 2007). The gold standard in clinical practice is an autologous bone graft (Einhorn and Gerstenfeld, 2015). Adiponectin Promotes Bone Regeneration site and perioperative complications significantly restrict the employment of this approach (Baqain et al, 2009). Supraphysiological dosage is necessary in clinical practice, causing undesirable side effects, including hollow bone formation, life-threatening tissue edema, and cancer (Cahill et al, 2009; Barbour et al, 2011; Skovrlj et al, 2015). Developing alternative strategies are imperative for bone regeneration

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