TY - JOUR A1 - Thibaudeau, Laure A1 - Taubenberger, Anna V. A1 - Holzapfel, Boris M. A1 - Quent, Verena M. A1 - Fuehrmann, Tobias A1 - Hesami, Parisa A1 - Brown, Toby D. A1 - Dalton, Paul D. A1 - Power, Carl A. A1 - Hollier, Brett G. A1 - Hutmacher, Dietmar W. T1 - A tissue-engineered humanized xenograft model of human breast cancer metastasis to bone JF - Disease Models & Mechanisms N2 - The skeleton is a preferred homing site for breast cancer metastasis. To date, treatment options for patients with bone metastases are mostly palliative and the disease is still incurable. Indeed, key mechanisms involved in breast cancer osteotropism are still only partially understood due to the lack of suitable animal models to mimic metastasis of human tumor cells to a human bone microenvironment. In the presented study, we investigate the use of a human tissue-engineered bone construct to develop a humanized xenograft model of breast cancer-induced bone metastasis in a murine host. Primary human osteoblastic cell-seeded melt electrospun scaffolds in combination with recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein 7 were implanted subcutaneously in non-obese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficient mice. The tissue-engineered constructs led to the formation of a morphologically intact 'organ' bone incorporating a high amount of mineralized tissue, live osteocytes and bone marrow spaces. The newly formed bone was largely humanized, as indicated by the incorporation of human bone cells and human-derived matrix proteins. After intracardiac injection, the dissemination of luciferase-expressing human breast cancer cell lines to the humanized bone ossicles was detected by bioluminescent imaging. Histological analysis revealed the presence of metastases with clear osteolysis in the newly formed bone. Thus, human tissue-engineered bone constructs can be applied efficiently as a target tissue for human breast cancer cells injected into the blood circulation and replicate the osteolytic phenotype associated with breast cancer-induced bone lesions. In conclusion, we have developed an appropriate model for investigation of species-specific mechanisms of human breast cancer-related bone metastasis in vivo. KW - breast cancer KW - bone metastasis KW - humanized xenograft model KW - melt electrospinning KW - tissue engineering KW - osteotropism KW - in vivo KW - stem-cell niche KW - human prostate-cancer KW - morphogenetic protein KW - osteoprogenitor cells KW - endochondral ossification KW - mouse model KW - trabecular bone KW - calcium phosphate KW - skeletal metastases Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-117466 VL - 7 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Benisch, Peggy A1 - Schilling, Tatjana A1 - Klein-Hitpass, Ludger A1 - Frey, Sönke P. A1 - Seefried, Lothar A1 - Raaijmakers, Nadja A1 - Krug, Melanie A1 - Regensburger, Martina A1 - Zeck, Sabine A1 - Schinke, Thorsten A1 - Amling, Michael A1 - Ebert, Amling A1 - Jakob, Franz T1 - The Transcriptional Profile of Mesenchymal Stem Cell Populations in Primary Osteoporosis Is Distinct and Shows Overexpression of Osteogenic Inhibitors JF - PLoS One N2 - Primary osteoporosis is an age-related disease characterized by an imbalance in bone homeostasis. While the resorptive aspect of the disease has been studied intensely, less is known about the anabolic part of the syndrome or presumptive deficiencies in bone regeneration. Multipotent mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are the primary source of osteogenic regeneration. In the present study we aimed to unravel whether MSC biology is directly involved in the pathophysiology of the disease and therefore performed microarray analyses of hMSC of elderly patients (79-94 years old) suffering from osteoporosis (hMSC-OP). In comparison to age-matched controls we detected profound changes in the transcriptome in hMSC-OP, e.g. enhanced mRNA expression of known osteoporosis-associated genes (LRP5, RUNX2, COL1A1) and of genes involved in osteoclastogenesis (CSF1, PTH1R), but most notably of genes coding for inhibitors of WNT and BMP signaling, such as Sclerostin and MAB21L2. These candidate genes indicate intrinsic deficiencies in self-renewal and differentiation potential in osteoporotic stem cells. We also compared both hMSC-OP and non-osteoporotic hMSC-old of elderly donors to hMSC of similar to 30 years younger donors and found that the transcriptional changes acquired between the sixth and the ninth decade of life differed widely between osteoporotic and non-osteoporotic stem cells. In addition, we compared the osteoporotic transcriptome to long term-cultivated, senescent hMSC and detected some signs for pre-senescence in hMSC-OP. Our results suggest that in primary osteoporosis the transcriptomes of hMSC populations show distinct signatures and little overlap with non-osteoporotic aging, although we detected some hints for senescence-associated changes. While there are remarkable inter-individual variations as expected for polygenetic diseases, we could identify many susceptibility genes for osteoporosis known from genetic studies. We also found new candidates, e.g. MAB21L2, a novel repressor of BMP-induced transcription. Such transcriptional changes may reflect epigenetic changes, which are part of a specific osteoporosis-associated aging process. KW - alkaline-phosphatase KW - in vitro KW - bone-mineral density KW - age-related osteoporosis KW - WNT signaling pathway KW - replicative senescence KW - morphogenetic protein KW - parathyroid-hormone KW - growth factor KW - skeletal overexpression Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-133379 VL - 7 IS - 9 ER -