Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9104564 | Bone | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The influence of OPG gene therapy on callus formation, callus tissue structural strength, apparent material properties, and histology of tibia fractures in rats was investigated after 3 weeks and 8 weeks of healing. Intramuscular administration of adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector-mediated OPG resulted in increased levels of OPG in serum of approximately 100 ng/ml throughout the study period. Control animals with fractures received transduction with an AAV reporter gene construct (AAV-enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP)), and in this group serum OPG levels remained at baseline (<10 ng/ml). After 3 weeks of healing, AAV-OPG treatment reduced the number of osteoclasts in the callus tissue (33%, PÂ <Â 0.001). However, AAV-OPG treatment did not influence callus dimensions, callus bone mineral content (BMC), fracture structural strength, or apparent callus tissue material properties. After 8 weeks of healing, AAV-OPG treatment reduced the number of osteoclasts in the callus tissue (31%, PÂ <Â 0.001) compared with AAV-eGFP fractures. Furthermore, deposition of new woven bone at the fracture line of the original cortical bone was hampered (new woven bone present: in all AAV-eGFP animals, in 41% of AAV-OPG-treated animals, PÂ <Â 0.001). AAV-OPG treatment also increased callus BMC (18%, PÂ =Â 0.023) compared with AAV-eGFP fractures. AAV-OPG did not influence callus dimensions, structural strength of the fractures, or ultimate stress, whereas elastic modulus was reduced in the AAV-OPG groups (37%, PÂ =Â 0.039). The experiment demonstrates that AAV-OPG gene therapy decreases the fracture remodeling, but this does not influence the structural strength of healing fractures.
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Authors
Michael Ulrich-Vinther, Edward M. Schwarz, Finn S. Pedersen, Kjeld Søballe, Troels T. Andreassen,