Muscle insulin-like growth factor-I modulates murine craniofacial bone growth

Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) is essential for muscle and bone development and a primary mediator of growth hormone (GH) actions. While studies have elucidated the importance of IGF-I specifically in muscle or bone development, few studies to date have evaluated the relationship between musc...

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Main Authors: HJ Kok, CN Crowder, L Koo Min Chee, HY Choi, N Lin, ER Barton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AO Research Institute Davos 2021-07-01
Series:European Cells & Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ecmjournal.org/papers/vol042/pdf/v042a06.pdf
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spelling doaj-f5a8b122e7294dacb5f73c977854e9fb2021-07-19T12:30:36Zeng AO Research Institute DavosEuropean Cells & Materials1473-22622021-07-0142728910.22203/eCM.v042a06Muscle insulin-like growth factor-I modulates murine craniofacial bone growthHJ KokCN CrowderL Koo Min CheeHY ChoiN LinER Barton Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) is essential for muscle and bone development and a primary mediator of growth hormone (GH) actions. While studies have elucidated the importance of IGF-I specifically in muscle or bone development, few studies to date have evaluated the relationship between muscle and bone modulated by IGF-I in vivo, during post-natal growth. Mice with muscle-specific IGF-I overexpression (mIgf1+/+) were utilised to determine IGF-I- and muscle-mass-dependent effects on craniofacial skeleton development during post-natal growth. mIgf1+/+ mice displayed accelerated craniofacial bone growth when compared to wild-type animals. Virus-mediated expression of IGF-I targeting the masseter was performed to determine if post-natal modulation of IGF-I altered mandibular structures. Increased IGF-I in the masseter affected the mandibular base plane angle in a lateral manner, increasing the width of the mandible. At the cellular level, increased muscle IGF-I also accelerated cartilage thickness in the mandibular condyle. Importantly, mandibular length changes associated with increased IGF-I were not present in mice with genetic inhibition of muscle IGF-I receptor activity. These results demonstrated that muscle IGF-I could indirectly affect craniofacial growth through IGF-I-dependent increases in muscle hypertrophy. These findings have clinical implications when considering IGF-I as a therapeutic strategy for craniofacial disorders.https://www.ecmjournal.org/papers/vol042/pdf/v042a06.pdfmuscle-bone interactioninsulin-like growth factor icraniofacial
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author HJ Kok
CN Crowder
L Koo Min Chee
HY Choi
N Lin
ER Barton
spellingShingle HJ Kok
CN Crowder
L Koo Min Chee
HY Choi
N Lin
ER Barton
Muscle insulin-like growth factor-I modulates murine craniofacial bone growth
European Cells & Materials
muscle-bone interaction
insulin-like growth factor i
craniofacial
author_facet HJ Kok
CN Crowder
L Koo Min Chee
HY Choi
N Lin
ER Barton
author_sort HJ Kok
title Muscle insulin-like growth factor-I modulates murine craniofacial bone growth
title_short Muscle insulin-like growth factor-I modulates murine craniofacial bone growth
title_full Muscle insulin-like growth factor-I modulates murine craniofacial bone growth
title_fullStr Muscle insulin-like growth factor-I modulates murine craniofacial bone growth
title_full_unstemmed Muscle insulin-like growth factor-I modulates murine craniofacial bone growth
title_sort muscle insulin-like growth factor-i modulates murine craniofacial bone growth
publisher AO Research Institute Davos
series European Cells & Materials
issn 1473-2262
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) is essential for muscle and bone development and a primary mediator of growth hormone (GH) actions. While studies have elucidated the importance of IGF-I specifically in muscle or bone development, few studies to date have evaluated the relationship between muscle and bone modulated by IGF-I in vivo, during post-natal growth. Mice with muscle-specific IGF-I overexpression (mIgf1+/+) were utilised to determine IGF-I- and muscle-mass-dependent effects on craniofacial skeleton development during post-natal growth. mIgf1+/+ mice displayed accelerated craniofacial bone growth when compared to wild-type animals. Virus-mediated expression of IGF-I targeting the masseter was performed to determine if post-natal modulation of IGF-I altered mandibular structures. Increased IGF-I in the masseter affected the mandibular base plane angle in a lateral manner, increasing the width of the mandible. At the cellular level, increased muscle IGF-I also accelerated cartilage thickness in the mandibular condyle. Importantly, mandibular length changes associated with increased IGF-I were not present in mice with genetic inhibition of muscle IGF-I receptor activity. These results demonstrated that muscle IGF-I could indirectly affect craniofacial growth through IGF-I-dependent increases in muscle hypertrophy. These findings have clinical implications when considering IGF-I as a therapeutic strategy for craniofacial disorders.
topic muscle-bone interaction
insulin-like growth factor i
craniofacial
url https://www.ecmjournal.org/papers/vol042/pdf/v042a06.pdf
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AT hychoi muscleinsulinlikegrowthfactorimodulatesmurinecraniofacialbonegrowth
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