Impairment of Bone Healing by Insulin Receptor Substrate-1 Deficiency

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Abstract

Insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) is an essential molecule for intracellular signaling of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I and insulin, both of which are potent anabolic regulators of bone and cartilage metabolism. To investigate the role of IRS-1 in bone regeneration, fracture was introduced in the tibia, and its healing was compared between wild-type (WT) mice and mice lacking the IRS-1 gene (IRS-1-/- mice). Among 15 IRS-1-/- mice, 12 remained in a non-union state even at 10 weeks after the operation, whereas all 15 WT mice showed a rigid bone union at 3 weeks. This impairment was because of the suppression of callus formation with a decrease in chondrocyte proliferation and increases in hypertrophic differentiation and apoptosis. Reintroduction of IRS-1 to the IRS-1-/- fractured site using an adenovirus vector significantly restored the callus formation. In the culture of chondrocytes isolated from the mouse growth plate, IRS-1 -/- chondrocytes showed less mitogenic ability and Akt phosphorylation than WT chondrocytes. An Akt inhibitor decreased the IGF-I-stimulated DNA synthesis of chondrocytes more potently in the WT culture than in the IRS-1-/- culture. We therefore conclude that IRS-1 deficiency impairs bone healing at least partly by inhibiting chondrocyte proliferation through the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway, and we propose that IRS-1 can be a target molecule for bone regenerative medicine.

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Shimoaka, T., Kamekura, S., Chikuda, H., Hoshi, K., Chung, U. I., Akune, T., … Kawaguchi, H. (2004). Impairment of Bone Healing by Insulin Receptor Substrate-1 Deficiency. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(15), 15314–15322. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M312525200

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