Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences on calcified tissues

ba0001pp12 | Clinical case posters | ECTS2013

Severe osteoporosis associated with Hajdu–Cheney syndrome: follow-up after 2 years of teriparatide therapy

Terroso Georgina , Bernardes Miguel , Aleixo Abelha , Vieira Romana , Madureira Pedro , Fonseca Rita , Goncalves Diana , Costa Lucia

Objectives: To describe the response to treatment with teriparatide for osteoporosis associated with Hajdu–Cheney syndrome after a follow-up 2 years.Material and methods: A 51-year-old woman presented in our outpatient clinic with pseudo-clubbing of some fingers and toes. She was short (139 cm) and thin (34 kg). She also had some facial and cranial abnormalities: thin lips, long philtrum, full cheeks, micrognathia, short neck, bushy eyebrows and coa...

ba0001pp44 | Bone biomechanics and quality | ECTS2013

2-Oxoglutaric acid protects against side effects of maximal therapeutic doses of dexamethasone in piglets skeleton

Dobrowolski Piotr , Tomaszewska Ewa , Kurlak Paulina , Pierzynowski Stefan

Synthetic glucocorticoids such as dexamethasone (Dex) are widely used for treatment of premature infants with chronic lung disease or respiratory distress syndrome or in allergic conditions such as asthma. Adverse effect of these treatments is glucocorticoids-induced osteoporosis. On the other hand there are functional foods, for instance 2-oxoglutaric acid (2-Ox) a precursor of hydroxyproline the prevailing amino acid in bone collagen, which reduce the risk of osteoporosis. T...

ba0001pp46 | Bone biomechanics and quality | ECTS2013

Low magnitude vibration signals attenuate the rapid bone mass induced by lipopolysaccharide

Kim In Sook , Cho Tae Hyung , Lee Beomseok , Hwang Soon Jung

Introduction: Low-magnitude, high-frequency (LMHF) mechanical stimuli lead to enhance bone formation and decrease resorption. This study aimed to investigate the effect of vibration on the bone loss induced by inflammatory cytokine, lipopolysaccharide (LPS).Methods and designs: Balb-C mice were administered to LPS (5 mg/kg) with two i.p. injections on days 0 and 4, while sham control group was injected with 400 μl of water for injection without LPS....

ba0001pp57 | Bone biomechanics and quality | ECTS2013

Role of receptor activity modifying protein 3 in the response of bone to mechanical loading

Livesey Matthew , Pacharne Suruchi , Wang Ning , Grabowski Peter , Yang Lang , Richards Gareth , Skerry Tim

Adaptive responses of the skeleton to loading changes architecture and physical properties in order to optimise strength for function. However, bone is subjected to many local and circulating osteotropic factors, most acting on G-protein coupled receptors. Receptor activity modifying protein-3 is a single trans-membrane domain receptor accessory protein, which aids in trafficking of calcitonin and calcitonin-like receptors to the cell surface and changes ligand selectivity. As...

ba0001pp66 | Bone development/growth and fracture repair | ECTS2013

The P2Y2 receptor restrains BMD during development

Syberg Susanne , Ellegaard Maria , Schwarz Peter , Jorgensen Niklas Rye

The P2Y2 receptor is a G-protein-coupled receptor and the natural ligands (ATP/UTP) strongly inhibit mineralized bone nodule formation by osteoblasts in vitro. We have earlier shown that overexpression of the P2Y2 receptor in vivo resulted in decreased bone mineral density (BMD), partially due to increased bone resorption, but also decreased formation (detected by serum bone markers and bone histomorphometry).This ...

ba0001pp88 | Bone development/growth and fracture repair | ECTS2013

Low calcium intake aggravates the deleterious effects of an isocaloric low protein diet on bone material level properties during growth

Fournier Carole , Rizzoli Rene , Ammann Patrick

Low protein or low calcium intake are known to impair bone growth, but their combined effects on determinants of bone strength are not well understood. We investigated the influence of various protein and calcium containing diets on determinants of bone strength in growing rats.One-month-old female rats were fed isocaloric diets containing 10, 7.5 or 5% casein, with 1.1% (normal; NCa) or 0.2% calcium (low; LCa) during 8 weeks. Tibia midshaft geometry (ou...

ba0001pp104 | Calciotropic and phosphotropic hormones and mineral metabolism | ECTS2013

Neonatal neuroendocrine alterations impair tooth eruption, enamel mineralization, and leptin and corticosterone secretion in adulthood

de Mello Wagner Garcez , de Morais Samuel Rodrigues Lourenco , Delbem Alberto Carlos Botazzo , Dornelles Rita Cassia Menegati , Antunes-Rodrigues Jose , de Castro Joao Cesar Bedran

There is a growing body of evidence indicating the important role of the neonatal steroid milieu in programming sexually dimorphic pattern in various physiological systems. We tested the hypothesis that abnormal exposure to steroid hormones within a critical developmental period elicits permanent changes on tooth eruption, enamel mineralization, and leptin and corticosterone concentrations in adulthood. Newborn Wistar rats were divided into four groups, two male groups and two...

ba0001pp143 | Cancer and bone: basic, translational and clinical | ECTS2013

Bone remodelling in patients with an IgM monoclonal gammopathy (Waldenstrom disease – MGUS)

Chappard Daniel , Bouvard Beatrice , Royer Mathieu , Hoppe Emmanuel , Legrand Erick , Ifrah Norbert , Audran Maurice

An IgM monoclonal gammopathy (MGUS) is often the first sign of a lymphomonocytic B-lymphoma (Waldenström macroglobulinemia-WD). Osteolytic lesions can occur in B cell malignancies (WD, hairy cell leukemia, LLC\..) but are less frequent than in myeloma. In addition, bone remodeling in WD is poorly understood. However, an osteoporosis is often observed in MGUS patients. We studied a series of bone biopsies performed in patients with an IgM gammopathy by histomorphometry, mi...

ba0001pp147 | Cancer and bone: basic, translational and clinical | ECTS2013

Involvement of the co-receptor RAMP2 in the progression of breast cancer-induced osteolytic lesions

Cappariello Alfredo , Rucci Nadia , Capulli Mattia , Muraca Maurizio , Teti Anna

Bone is the primary site of metastasis for breast cancer, which leads mainly to osteolytic lesions, Cancer cells can expand into the bone for their ability to ‘dialogue’ with resident cells, interfering with the physiological processes of bone turnover. In this study, a large-scale analysis comparing gene expression of biopsies of bone and visceral metastases from human breast cancer patients showed that the receptor (G protein-coupled) activity modifying protein-2 (...

ba0001pp158 | Cancer and bone: basic, translational and clinical | ECTS2013

Role of receptor activity modifying proteins in skeletal regulation

Pacharne Suruchi , Richards Gareth , Wang Ning , Skerry Timothy , Caron Kathleen

Receptor activity modifying proteins (RAMPs 1, 2 and 3) are a class of important accessory proteins that interact and regulate several G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) activity by finely modulating ligand interaction and in some cases trafficking receptors to cell surface.Predominant roles of RAMPs include ligand selectivity in receptors for Calcitonin (CT) family of peptides that comprise calcitonin, calcitonin gene related peptide, amylin and Adrenome...