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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Sustained osteomalacia of long bones despite major improvement in other hypophosphatasia-related mineral deficits in tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase/nucleotide pyrophosphatase phosphodiesterase 1 double-deficient mice.

Journal:
The American journal of pathology
Year:
2005
Authors:
Anderson, H Clarke et al.
Affiliation:
University of Kansas Medical Center · United States
Species:
rodent

Abstract

We have shown previously that the hypomineralization defects of the calvarium and vertebrae of tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP)-deficient (Akp2-/-) hypophosphatasia mice are rescued by simultaneous deletion of the Enpp1 gene, which encodes nucleotide pyrophosphatase phosphodiesterase 1 (NPP1). Conversely, the hyperossification in the vertebral apophyses typical of Enpp1-/- mice is corrected in [Akp2-/-; Enpp1-/-] double-knockout mice. Here we have examined the appendicular skeletons of Akp2-/-, Enpp1-/-, and [Akp2-/-; Enpp1-/-] mice to ascertain the degree of rescue afforded at these skeletal sites. Alizarin red and Alcian blue whole mount analysis of the skeletons from wild-type, Akp2-/-, and [Akp2-/-; Enpp1-/-] mice revealed that although calvarium and vertebrae of double-knockout mice were normalized with respect to mineral deposition, the femur and tibia were not. Using several different methodologies, we found reduced mineralization not only in Akp2-/- but also in Enpp1-/- and [Akp2-/-; Enpp1-/-] femurs and tibias. Analysis of calvarial- and bone marrow-derived osteoblasts for mineralized nodule formation in vitro showed increased mineral deposition by Enpp1-/- calvarial osteoblasts but decreased mineral deposition by Enpp1-/- long bone marrow-derived osteoblasts in comparison to wild-type cells. Thus, the osteomalacia of Akp2-/- mice and the hypomineralized phenotype of the long bones of Enpp1-/- mice are not rescued by simultaneous deletion of TNAP and NPP1 functions.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15920156/