Pharmacological elevation of sphingosine‐1‐phosphate by S1P lyase inhibition accelerates bone regeneration after post‐traumatic osteomyelitis

Author:

Wagner Johannes M.12ORCID,Wille Annalena3,Fueth Maria1,Weske Sarah3,Lotzien Sebastian2,Reinkemeier Felix1,Wallner Christoph1,Sogorski Alexander1,Dittfeld Stephanie1,Becerikli Mustafa1,Schildhauer Thomas A.2,Lehnhardt Marcus1,Levkau Bodo3,Behr Björn1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plastic Surgery BG University Hospital Bergmannsheil Bochum Bochum Germany

2. Department of Trauma Surgery and General Surgery BG University Hospital Bergmannsheil Bochum Bochum Germany

3. Institute of Molecular Medicine III University Hospital Düsseldorf and Heinrich Heine Universität Düsseldorf Düsseldorf Germany

Abstract

AbstractPosttraumatic osteomyelitis and the ensuing bone defects are a debilitating complication after open fractures with little therapeutic options. We have recently identified potent osteoanabolic effects of sphingosine‐1‐phosphate (S1P) signalling and have now tested whether it may beneficially affect bone regeneration after infection. We employed pharmacological S1P lyase inhibition by 4‐deoxypyrodoxin (DOP) to raise S1P levels in vivo in an unicortical long bone defect model of posttraumatic osteomyelitis in mice. In a translational approach, human bone specimens of clinical osteomyelitis patients were treated in organ culture in vitro with DOP. Bone regeneration was assessed by μCT, histomorphometry, immunohistology and gene expression analysis. The role of S1P receptors was addressed using S1PR3 deficient mice. Here, we present data that DOP treatment markedly enhanced osteogenesis in posttraumatic osteomyelitis. This was accompanied by greatly improved osteoblastogenesis and enhanced angiogenesis in the callus accompanied by osteoclast‐mediated bone remodelling. We also identified the target of increased S1P to be the S1PR3 as S1PR3−/− mice showed no improvement of bone regeneration by DOP. In the human bone explants, bone mass significantly increased along with enhanced osteoblastogenesis and angiogenesis. Our data suggest that enhancement of S1P/S1PR3 signalling may be a promising therapeutic target for bone regeneration in posttraumatic osteomyelitis.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Medicine

Reference50 articles.

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