4.6 Review

Retinoid Agonists in the Targeting of Heterotopic Ossification

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10113245

Keywords

retinoids; retinoic acid receptors; chondrogenesis; heterotopic ossification; palovarotene

Categories

Funding

  1. International FOP Association
  2. Radiant Hope Foundation
  3. Robert and Arlene Kogod Professorship
  4. NIH [RO1AR071946]

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Metabolic derivatives of vitamin A, known as retinoids, regulate tissue and organ functions prenatally and postnatally. Studies showed that chondrogenic cell differentiation and cartilage maturation require the absence of retinoid signaling and repression function by unliganded RARs. Synthetic retinoid agonists could be potential pharmacological agents to inhibit heterotopic ossification.
Retinoids are metabolic derivatives of vitamin A and regulate the function of many tissues and organs both prenatally and postnatally. Active retinoids, such as all trans-retinoic acid, are produced in the cytoplasm and then interact with nuclear retinoic acid receptors (RARs) to up-regulate the transcription of target genes. The RARs can also interact with target gene response elements in the absence of retinoids and exert a transcriptional repression function. Studies from several labs, including ours, showed that chondrogenic cell differentiation and cartilage maturation require (i) the absence of retinoid signaling and (ii) the repression function by unliganded RARs. These and related insights led to the proposition that synthetic retinoid agonists could thus represent pharmacological agents to inhibit heterotopic ossification (HO), a process that recapitulates developmental skeletogenesis and involves chondrogenesis, cartilage maturation, and endochondral ossification. One form of HO is acquired and is caused by injury, and another severe and often fatal form of it is genetic and occurs in patients with fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP). Mouse models of FOP bearing mutant ACVR1R206H, characteristic of most FOP patients, were used to test the ability of the retinoid agonists selective for RAR alpha and RAR gamma against spontaneous and injury-induced HO. The RAR gamma agonists were found to be most effective, and one such compound, palovarotene, was selected for testing in FOP patients. The safety and effectiveness data from recent and ongoing phase II and phase III clinical trials support the notion that palovarotene may represent a disease-modifying treatment for patients with FOP. The post hoc analyses showed substantial efficacy but also revealed side effects and complications, including premature growth plate closure in some patients. Skeletally immature patients will need to be carefully weighed in any future regulatory indications of palovarotene as an important therapeutic option in FOP.

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