4.7 Article

Calvaria Bone Transcriptome in Mouse Models of Osteogenesis Imperfecta

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22105290

Keywords

osteogenesis imperfecta; RNA sequencing; transforming growth factor beta; Wnt signaling

Funding

  1. Reseau de recherche en sante buccodentaire et osseuse (RSBO) [67070]
  2. Consortium quebecois sur la decouverte du medicament (CQDM)
  3. PreciThera, Inc.
  4. Shriners of North America

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Comparing the transcriptome of calvaria bone tissue in different types of OI mouse models revealed shared dysregulated genes that may play an important role in the pathophysiology of the disorder.
Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a bone fragility disorder that is usually caused by mutations affecting collagen type I. We compared the calvaria bone tissue transcriptome of male 10-week-old heterozygous Jrt (Col1a1 mutation) and homozygous oim mice (Col1a2 mutation) to their respective littermate results. We found that Jrt and oim mice shared 185 differentially expressed genes (upregulated: 106 genes; downregulated: 79 genes). A total of seven genes were upregulated by a factor of two or more in both mouse models (Cyp2e1, Slc13a5, Cgref1, Smpd3, Ifitm5, Cthrc1 and Rerg). One gene (Gypa, coding for a blood group antigen) was downregulated by a factor of two or more in both OI mouse models. Overrepresentation analyses revealed that genes involved in 'ossification' were significantly overrepresented among upregulated genes in both Jrt and oim mice, whereas hematopoietic genes were downregulated. Several genes involved in Wnt signaling and transforming growth factor beta signaling were upregulated in oim mice, but less so in Jrt mice. Thus, this study identified a set of genes that are dysregulated across various OI mouse models and are likely to play an important role in the pathophysiology of this disorder.

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