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Macrophage-derived oncostatin M contributes to human and mouse neurogenic heterotopic ossifications
Frédéric Torossian, … , Jean-Jacques Lataillade, Marie-Caroline Le Bousse-Kerdilès
Frédéric Torossian, … , Jean-Jacques Lataillade, Marie-Caroline Le Bousse-Kerdilès
Published November 2, 2017
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2017;2(21):e96034. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.96034.
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Research Article Bone biology Hematology

Macrophage-derived oncostatin M contributes to human and mouse neurogenic heterotopic ossifications

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Abstract

Neurogenic heterotopic ossification (NHO) is the formation of ectopic bone generally in muscles surrounding joints following spinal cord or brain injury. We investigated the mechanisms of NHO formation in 64 patients and a mouse model of spinal cord injury–induced NHO. We show that marrow from human NHOs contains hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) niches, in which mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) and endothelial cells provide an environment supporting HSC maintenance, proliferation, and differentiation. The transcriptomic signature of MSCs from NHOs shows a neuronal imprinting associated with a molecular network required for HSC support. We demonstrate that oncostatin M (OSM) produced by activated macrophages promotes osteoblastic differentiation and mineralization of human muscle-derived stromal cells surrounding NHOs. The key role of OSM was confirmed using an experimental model of NHO in mice defective for the OSM receptor (OSMR). Our results provide strong evidence that macrophages contribute to NHO formation through the osteogenic action of OSM on muscle cells within an inflammatory context and suggest that OSM/OSMR could be a suitable therapeutic target. Altogether, the evidence of HSCs in ectopic bones growing at the expense of soft tissue in spinal cord/brain-injured patients indicates that inflammation and muscle contribute to HSC regulation by the brain-bone-blood triad.

Authors

Frédéric Torossian, Bernadette Guerton, Adrienne Anginot, Kylie A. Alexander, Christophe Desterke, Sabrina Soave, Hsu-Wen Tseng, Nassim Arouche, Laetitia Boutin, Irina Kulina, Marjorie Salga, Beulah Jose, Allison R. Pettit, Denis Clay, Nathalie Rochet, Erica Vlachos, Guillaume Genet, Charlotte Debaud, Philippe Denormandie, François Genet, Natalie A. Sims, Sébastien Banzet, Jean-Pierre Levesque, Jean-Jacques Lataillade, Marie-Caroline Le Bousse-Kerdilès

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Figure 4

Spinal cord injury imprinting of human NHO-MSCs.

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Spinal cord injury imprinting of human NHO-MSCs.
(A) Transcriptome heatm...
(A) Transcriptome heatmap performed with bone marrow niche functionality–related genes differentially expressed between neurogenic heterotopic ossification (NHO) and bone marrow (BM) mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs); unsupervised classification was performed with Euclidean distances. Dual-color scale from blue to red is correlated with mRNA level expression. (B) Principal component analysis performed with bone marrow niche–related genes differentially expressed between NHO-MSCs and BM-MSCs (P value of group discrimination was calculated with Pearson correlation of the group variable to the first principal component). (C) WikiPathway functional enrichment of BM niche–related genes upregulated in NHO-MSCs as compared with BM-MSCs (P = 0.0006, P value were estimated by Fisher exact test with Enrichr application). (D) Box plot of genes modulated after spinal cord injury and found upregulated in NHO-MSCs as compared with BM-MSCs (P value was calculated with 2-tailed Student’s t test). The box-and-whisker plot shows median, 25th and 75th percentile, minimum and maximum values.

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