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Localization of phosphorylated serine, osteopontin, and bone sialoprotein on bone fracture surfaces

Localization of phosphorylated serine, osteopontin, and bone sialoprotein on bone fracture surfaces
Localization of phosphorylated serine, osteopontin, and bone sialoprotein on bone fracture surfaces
Bone mineral density or bone mass alone cannot reliably predict fracture risk in patients. It is generally accepted that bone quality, including the properties of the organic matrix of bone, should also be considered. Collagen type I accounts for about 90% of this organic matrix. The other 10% are accounted for by various proteins and proteoglycans usually summarized by the term noncollagenous proteins (NCPs). These NCPs have a large influence on the nanoscale organization of bone. In addition, some NCPs have intriguing properties that could strongly influence bone matrix material properties; they can form self-healing networks based on ion-mediated bonds. Such behavior was also reported for trabecular bone fracture surfaces, rejoined after cleavage. To obtain proof that this behavior of bone is due to NCPs, an immunohistochemical approach was chosen for the work presented in this communication. Antibodies for phosphoserine, which is abundant in many NCPs but not in collagen type I, as well as antibodies for osteopontin and bone sialoprotein, were used on human trabecular bone fracture surfaces and microfractured trabeculae. Signals were detected using secondary gold-labeled antibodies and backscattered scanning electron microscopy. We found homogenous NCP coverage of fracture surfaces and elevated signals on bridging ligaments. Osteopontin and bone sialoprotein were detected in localized patches. Overall, this work suggests that the self-healing effect of trabecluar bone fracture surfaces, rejoined after cleavage, can be explained by the presence of NCPs. In addition, we conclude that NCPs also constitute the interface that is disrupted when bone fails, attributing them high importance for bone matrix material properties and fracture risk.
bone sialoprotein, immunhistochemistry, microfracture, noncollagenous proteins, osteopontin, phosphoserine, trabecular bone
0021-8464
526-545
Thurner, Philipp J.
ab711ddd-784e-48de-aaad-f56aec40f84f
Lam, Stephanie
85c7bbf8-23cd-467e-8c2c-e2efaedf2a25
Weaver, James C.
a8234238-bb1c-4bc2-8a1b-5484a8bbd5bd
Morse, Daniel E.
aaa0e018-1bd0-41f3-8ff8-b8a22015d742
Hansma, Paul K.
aeab95c4-0f23-4690-8302-72db3316215d
Thurner, Philipp J.
ab711ddd-784e-48de-aaad-f56aec40f84f
Lam, Stephanie
85c7bbf8-23cd-467e-8c2c-e2efaedf2a25
Weaver, James C.
a8234238-bb1c-4bc2-8a1b-5484a8bbd5bd
Morse, Daniel E.
aaa0e018-1bd0-41f3-8ff8-b8a22015d742
Hansma, Paul K.
aeab95c4-0f23-4690-8302-72db3316215d

Thurner, Philipp J., Lam, Stephanie, Weaver, James C., Morse, Daniel E. and Hansma, Paul K. (2009) Localization of phosphorylated serine, osteopontin, and bone sialoprotein on bone fracture surfaces. Journal of Adhesion, 85 (8), 526-545. (doi:10.1080/00218460902996424).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Bone mineral density or bone mass alone cannot reliably predict fracture risk in patients. It is generally accepted that bone quality, including the properties of the organic matrix of bone, should also be considered. Collagen type I accounts for about 90% of this organic matrix. The other 10% are accounted for by various proteins and proteoglycans usually summarized by the term noncollagenous proteins (NCPs). These NCPs have a large influence on the nanoscale organization of bone. In addition, some NCPs have intriguing properties that could strongly influence bone matrix material properties; they can form self-healing networks based on ion-mediated bonds. Such behavior was also reported for trabecular bone fracture surfaces, rejoined after cleavage. To obtain proof that this behavior of bone is due to NCPs, an immunohistochemical approach was chosen for the work presented in this communication. Antibodies for phosphoserine, which is abundant in many NCPs but not in collagen type I, as well as antibodies for osteopontin and bone sialoprotein, were used on human trabecular bone fracture surfaces and microfractured trabeculae. Signals were detected using secondary gold-labeled antibodies and backscattered scanning electron microscopy. We found homogenous NCP coverage of fracture surfaces and elevated signals on bridging ligaments. Osteopontin and bone sialoprotein were detected in localized patches. Overall, this work suggests that the self-healing effect of trabecluar bone fracture surfaces, rejoined after cleavage, can be explained by the presence of NCPs. In addition, we conclude that NCPs also constitute the interface that is disrupted when bone fails, attributing them high importance for bone matrix material properties and fracture risk.

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More information

Published date: August 2009
Additional Information: The Waite collection, part 2
Keywords: bone sialoprotein, immunhistochemistry, microfracture, noncollagenous proteins, osteopontin, phosphoserine, trabecular bone
Organisations: Bioengineering Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 79914
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/79914
ISSN: 0021-8464
PURE UUID: 27377b94-bd33-4be3-851a-e0aaf500ba25
ORCID for Philipp J. Thurner: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7588-9041

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Date deposited: 22 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 00:34

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Contributors

Author: Stephanie Lam
Author: James C. Weaver
Author: Daniel E. Morse
Author: Paul K. Hansma

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