Severely injured patients frequently suffer compromised fracture healing because of systemic post-traumatic inflammation. An important trigger of the posttraumatic immune response is the complement anaphylatoxin C5a, which acts via two receptors, C5aR1 and C5aR2, expressed on immune and bone cells. The blockade of C5a-mediated inflammation during the early inflammatory phase was demonstrated to improve fracture healing after severe injury. However, the distinct roles of the two complement receptors C5aR1 and C5aR2 in bone has to date not been studied. Here, we investigated bone turnover and regeneration in mice lacking either C5aR1 or C5aR2 in a model of isolated fracture and after severe injury, combining the fracture with an additional thoracic trauma. Both C5aR1−/− and C5aR2−/− mice displayed an increased bone mass compared to wild-type controls due to reduced osteoclast formation and increased osteoblast numbers, respectively. Following fracture, the inflammatory response was differently affected in these strains: It was decreased in C5aR1−/− mice but enhanced in C5aR2−/− mice. Both strains exhibited impaired fracture healing, disturbed osteoclastogenesis and delayed cartilage-to-bone transformation. Thus, our data suggest that C5aR1 and C5aR2 differentially regulate the immune response after fracture and are required for effective cartilage-to-bone transformation in the fracture callus and for undisturbed bone healing.
The anaphylatoxin receptor C5aR1 plays an important role not only in innate immune responses, but also in bone metabolism and fracture healing, being highly expressed on immune and bone cells, including osteoblasts and osteoclasts. C5aR1 induces osteoblast migration, cytokine generation and osteoclastogenesis, however, the exact role of C5aR1-mediated signaling in osteoblasts is not entirely known. Therefore, we hypothesized that osteoblasts are essential target cells for C5a and that fracture healing should be disturbed in mice with an osteoblast-specific C5aR1 overexpression (Col1a1-C5aR1). Osteoblast activity in vitro, bone phenotype and fracture healing after isolated osteotomy and after combined osteotomy with additional thoracic trauma were analyzed. The systemic and local inflammatory reactions were analyzed by determining C5a and IL-6 concentrations in blood, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and fracture callus and the recruitment of immune cells. In vitro, osteoblast proliferation and differentiation were similar to wildtype cells, and phosphorylation of p38 and expression of IL-6 and RANKL were increased in osteoblasts derived from Col1a1-C5aR1 mice. Bone phenotype and the inflammatory reaction were unaffected in Col1a1-C5aR1 mice. Fracture healing was significantly impaired as demonstrated by significantly reduced bone content, bone mineral density and flexural rigidity, possibly due to significantly increased osteoclast numbers. C5aR1 signaling in osteoblasts might possibly affect RANKL/OPG balance, leading to increased bone resorption. Additional trauma significantly impaired fracture healing, particularly in Col1a1-C5aR1 mice. In conclusion, the data indicate that C5aR1 signaling in osteoblasts plays a detrimental role in bone regeneration after fracture.
Mice are extensively used for experimental bone-healing studies. However, there are few established nondestructive in vivo techniques for longitudinal fracture-healing analysis in mice, including in vivo micro-computed tomography (μCT) and radiography. Importantly, none of the established methods can discriminate between non-mineralized fibrous tissue and cartilage in the soft fracture callus. Therefore, the objective was to establish high-resolution in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for the longitudinal assessment of soft callus formation during bone healing in mice. C57BL/6J mice received a femur osteotomy stabilized using an external fixator and were randomly assigned to five groups. Group 1 mice were scanned three times longitudinally during fracture healing using an optimized MRI scanning protocol to establish an algorithm to characterize the different fracture-callus tissues. Mice of groups 2–4 were scanned once on day 10, 14 or 21, respectively, euthanized after scanning and their femurs subjected to ex vivo μCT and histomorphometric analysis to compare the data assessed by MRI with μCT and histology. Control group 5 mice were not scanned. After 28 days, mice of groups 1 and 5 were euthanized and the fracture-healing outcome was evaluated by bending-test, μCT and histology to determine whether the repeated anesthesia, handling and the MRI measurements themselves influenced fracture healing. The callus-tissue values determined by MRI were mostly comparable to those obtained by μCT and histomorphometric analysis. However, at time points characterized by small relative bone or cartilage areas, MRI measurements were weakly comparable to histomorphometric data, possibly due to the inferior spatial resolution. Importantly, at the early and intermediate phases of healing, cartilage and fibrous-tissue values obtained by MRI were highly accurate. Furthermore, repeated anesthesia, handling and MRI scans did not impact bone healing. Therefore, we demonstrated the feasibility of high-resolution in vivo MRI for longitudinal assessment of soft callus formation during murine endochondral fracture healing.
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