4.8 Article

NOTCH signaling in skeletal progenitors is critical for fracture repair

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 126, Issue 4, Pages 1471-1481

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI80672

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH R01 grants [AR057022, AR063071]
  2. NIH R21 grant [AR059733]
  3. NIH P50 Center of Research Translation grant [AR054041]
  4. NIH P30 Core Center grant [AR061307]
  5. AOTrauma Research Clinical Priority Program on Bone Infection
  6. National Science Foundation [DGE-1419118]

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Fracture nonunions develop in 10%-20% of patients with fractures, resulting in prolonged disability. Current data suggest that bone union during fracture repair is achieved via proliferation and differentiation of skeletal progenitors within periosteal and soft tissues surrounding bone, while bone marrow stromal/stem cells (BMSCs) and other skeletal progenitors may also contribute. The NOTCH signaling pathway is a critical maintenance factor for BMSCs during skeletal development, although the precise role for NOTCH and the requisite nature of BMSCs following fracture is unknown. Here, we evaluated whether NOTCH and/or BMSCs are required for fracture repair by performing nonstabilized and stabilized fractures on NOTCH deficient mice with targeted deletion of RBPjk in skeletal progenitors, maturing osteoblasts, and committed chondrocytes. We determined that removal of NOTCH signaling in BMSCs and subsequent depletion of this population result in fracture nonunion, as the fracture repair process was normal in animals harboring either osteoblast- or chondrocyte-specific deletion of RBPjk. Together, this work provides a genetic model of a fracture nonunion and demonstrates the requirement for NOTCH and BMSCs in fracture repair, irrespective of fracture stability and vascularity.

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