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A Neurotrophic Mechanism Directs Sensory Nerve Transit in Cranial Bone

  • Carolyn A. Meyers
  • , Seungyong Lee
  • , Takashi Sono
  • , Jiajia Xu
  • , Stefano Negri
  • , Ye Tian
  • , Yiyun Wang
  • , Zhu Li
  • , Sarah Miller
  • , Leslie Chang
  • , Yongxing Gao
  • , Liliana Minichiello
  • , Thomas L. Clemens
  • , Aaron W. James

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The flat bones of the skull are densely innervated during development, but little is known regarding their role during repair. We describe a neurotrophic mechanism that directs sensory nerve transit in the mouse calvaria. Patent cranial suture mesenchyme represents an NGF (nerve growth factor)-rich domain, in which sensory nerves transit. Experimental calvarial injury upregulates Ngf in an IL-1β/TNF-α-rich defect niche, with consequent axonal ingrowth. In calvarial osteoblasts, IL-1β and TNF-α stimulate Ngf and downstream NF-κB signaling. Locoregional deletion of Ngf delays defect site re-innervation and blunted repair. Genetic disruption of Ngf among LysM-expressing macrophages phenocopies these observations, whereas conditional knockout of Ngf among Pdgfra-expressing cells does not. Finally, inhibition of TrkA catalytic activity similarly delays re-innervation and repair. These results demonstrate an essential role of NGF-TrkA signaling in bone healing and implicate macrophage-derived NGF-induced ingrowth of skeletal sensory nerves as an important mediator of this repair.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number107696
JournalCell reports
Volume31
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - May 26 2020
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Author(s)

Keywords

  • NGF
  • TrkA
  • bone healing
  • calvarial bone
  • osteogenesis

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