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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 88 - 88
1 Jan 2017
Minkwtz S Ott C Gruenhagen J Fassbender M Wildemann B
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It is supposed that disturbed vascularization is a major cause for the development of an atrophic non-union. However, an actual study revealed normal vessel formation in human non-union tissues [1]. An animal study using an atrophic non-union model should clarify the influence of the inhibition of angiogenesis by the inhibitor Fumagillin on bone healing and the underlying processes including inflammation, chondrogenesis, angiogenesis and osteogenesis.

For each group and time point (3, 7, 14, 21 and 42 days) 5–6 adult female Sprague Dawley rats were analyzed. The tibia was osteotomized and stabilized intramedullary with a k-wire coated with the drug carrier PDLLA (control group) or PDLLA +10% Fumagillin (atrophy group). Microarrays: Total-RNA were pooled per group, labeled with the Agilent single-color Quick-Amp Labeling Kit Cy3 and hybridized on Agilent SurePrint G3 Rat Gene Expression microarrays. After feature extraction and quantile normalization, relevant biological processes were identified using GeneOntology. Genes with an expression value below the 25. percentile were excluded. Heatmaps were used for visualization.

The analysis of inflammatory genes revealed an upregulation of monocyte/macrophage- relevant factors such as the chemokines Ccl2 and Ccl12 and the surface marker CD14. Other factors involved in the early inflammation process such as Il1a, Tnf and Il6 were not affected. Chondrogenic markers including Collagen Type II, -IX, -X, Mmp9, Mmp13, Hapln1, Ucma, Runx2, Sox5 and -9 were downregulated in this group. Furthermore, osteogenic factors were less regulated within the middle stage of healing (day 14–21). This gene panel included Bmps, Bmp antagonists, Bmp- and Tgfb receptors, integrines and matrix proteins. qPCR analysis of angiogenic genes showed an upregulation of Angpt2, Fgf1 and -2, but not for Vegfa over the later healing time points.

We demonstrated in a previous study that inhibiting angiogenesis in an osteotomy model led to a reduction in vessel formation and to the development of an atrophic non-union phenotype [2]. The microarray analysis indicated no prolonged inflammatory reaction in the atrophy group. But the upregulation of chemokines together with a delay in hematoma degradation signs to a mismatch between recruitment and demand of macrophages from the vessel system. Furthermore, chondrogenesis was completely blocked, which was shown by a downregulation of chondrogenic but also osteogenic markers being involved in chondrogenic processes. A reduced recruitment of MSCs might be a possible explanation. Although, microarray data revealed only minor expression changes regarding angiogenic genes, validation by q-PCR showed an upregulation of Angpt2, Fgf1 and -2 over the later healing time points. Due to the heterogeneity of the callus tissue it might be that variations of gene expression of a single tissue type will be masked by the expression levels of other tissue types. This issue is even more pronounced when analyzing different time points and by pooling the samples.