4.6 Article

Adenovirus-mediated transmission of a dominant negative transforming growth factor-β receptor inhibits in vitro mouse cranial suture fusion

Journal

PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY
Volume 110, Issue 2, Pages 506-514

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/00006534-200208000-00022

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Funding

  1. NIDCR NIH HHS [R01DE13194] Funding Source: Medline

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Recent studies have implicated the transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta family in the regulation of pathological sporadic cranial suture fusion. In addition, these studies have shown that TGF-beta is highly expressed by the dura mater underlying fusing murine cranial sutures. The purpose of the present experiments was to analyze the effects of disrupting TGF-beta signaling during programmed mouse cranial suture fusion. Using recombinant DNA technology, a replication-deficient adenovirus encoding a defective TGF-beta receptor (Ad.DN-TbetaRII) capable of blocking TGF-beta biological activity vas constructed. Mouse posterior frontal sutures were harvested before the initiation of suture fusion (postnatal day T 25), and the dura mater underlying the suture was infected with vehicle, Ad.DN-TbetaRII, or control virus (Ad.LacZ; n = 10 each). Sutures were cultured for 14 or 30 days in an organ culture system and analyzed macroscopically and histologically. X-gal staining of Ad.LacZ-infected Sutures 14 days after culture revealed strong staining of cells localized to the dura mater. Macroscopic analysis revealed complete sutural fusion in vehicle and Ad.LacZ-infected sutures. In contrast, Ad.DN-TBRII-infected sutures demonstrated nearly complete patency. Histological analysis confirmed our macroscopic observations with sutural fusion in 81.3 +/- 10 percent and 74.5 +/- 9 percent of vehicle and Ad.LacZ-infected sutures, respectively, versus 38.1 +/- 12 percent (p < 0.001) in Ad.DN-TbetaRII-infected sutures. In addition, transfection with the Ad.DN-TbetaRII virus resulted in a significant attenuation of anterior-to-posterior suture fusion, with the majority of fused sections localized to anterior sections. These data strongly implicate TGF-beta biological activity in the dura mater underlying the posterior frontal Suture in the regulation of programmed sutural fusion. In addition, this study demonstrates the utility of adenovirus-mediated gene transfer in preventing programmed sutural fusion.

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