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1.
Bone ; 185: 117125, 2024 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38754573

RESUMO

The traditional understanding of bone mechanosensation implicates osteocytes, canaliculi, and the lacunocanalicular network in biomechanical adaptation. However, recent findings challenge this notion, as shown in advanced teleost fish where anosteocytic bone lacking osteocytes are nevertheless responsive to mechanical load. To investigate specific molecular mechanisms involved in bone mechanoadaptation in osteocytic and anosteocytic fish bone, we conducted a 5-min single swim-training experiment with zebrafish and ricefish, respectively. Through RNASeq analysis of fish spines, analyzed at various time points following swim training, we uncovered distinct gene expression patterns in osteocytic and anosteocytic fish bones. Notably, osteocytic fish bone exhibited an early response to mechanical load, contrasting to a delayed response observed in anosteocytic fish bones, both within 8 h following stimulation. We identified an increase in osteoblast differentiation in anosteocytic bone following training, while chordoblast activity was delayed. This temporal response suggests a time-dependent adaptation in anosteocytic bone, indicating the presence of intricate feedback networks within bone that lacks osteocytes.


Assuntos
Osteócitos , Natação , Peixe-Zebra , Animais , Osteócitos/metabolismo , Osteócitos/citologia , Peixe-Zebra/genética , Natação/fisiologia , Osso e Ossos/metabolismo , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Condicionamento Físico Animal/fisiologia , Osteoblastos/metabolismo , Osteoblastos/citologia , Diferenciação Celular/genética , Peixes/genética
2.
Arch Virol ; 168(9): 234, 2023 Aug 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37608200

RESUMO

A novel ephemerovirus was identified in a Holstein-Friesian cow in the Hefer Valley, Israel, that showed severe and fatal clinical signs resembling an arboviral infection. A sample taken during the acute phase tested negative for important endemic arboviral infectious cattle diseases. However, sequencing from blood revealed the full genome sequence of Hefer Valley virus, which is likely to represent a new species within the genus Ephemerovirus, family Rhabdoviridae. Archived samples from cattle with comparable clinical signs collected in Israel in 2021 and 2022 tested negative for the novel virus, and therefore, the actual distribution of the virus is unknown. As this is a recently identified new viral infection, the viral vector and the prevalence of the virus in the cattle population are still unknown but will be the subject of future investigations.


Assuntos
Ephemerovirus , Feminino , Bovinos , Animais , Israel/epidemiologia , Meio Ambiente
3.
BMC Vet Res ; 19(1): 64, 2023 Mar 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36997964

RESUMO

The use of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) is emerging as an efficacious and safe treatment for many infectious and non-infectious inflammatory diseases in human and veterinary medicine. Such use could be done to treat mastitis and metritis, which are the most common disease conditions affecting dairy cows leading to considerable economic losses and reduced animal welfare. Currently, both disease conditions are commonly treated using local and systemic administration of antibiotics. However, this strategy has many disadvantages including low cure rates and the public health hazards. Looking for alternative approaches, we investigated the properties of MSCs using in-vitro mammary and endometrial cell systems and in-vivo mastitis and metritis murine model systems. In-vitro, co-culture of mammary and uterus epithelial cells constructed with NF-kB reporter system, the master regulator of inflammation, demonstrated their anti-inflammatory effects in response to.LPS. In vivo, we challenge animals with field strains of mammary and utero pathogenic Escherichia coli and evaluated the effects of local and systemic application of MSC in the animal models. Disease outcome was evaluated using histological analysis, bacterial counts and gene expression of inflammatory markers. We show that MSC treatment reduced bacterial load in metritis and significantly modulated the inflammatory response of the uterus and mammary gland to bacterial infection. Most notably are the immune modulatory effects of remotely engrafted intravenous MSCs, which open new avenues to the development of MSC-based cell-free therapies.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Bovinos , Mastite Bovina , Células-Tronco Mesenquimais , Feminino , Bovinos , Humanos , Animais , Camundongos , Escherichia coli , Inflamação/veterinária , Inflamação/patologia , Útero/patologia , Glândulas Mamárias Animais/patologia , Mastite Bovina/microbiologia , Doenças dos Bovinos/patologia
4.
Bone Res ; 9(1): 14, 2021 Feb 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33637698

RESUMO

Ultra-processed foods have known negative implications for health; however, their effect on skeletal development has never been explored. Here, we show that young rats fed ultra-processed food rich in fat and sugar suffer from growth retardation due to lesions in their tibial growth plates. The bone mineral density decreases significantly, and the structural parameters of the bone deteriorate, presenting a sieve-like appearance in the cortices and poor trabecular parameters in long bones and vertebrae. This results in inferior mechanical performance of the entire bone with a high fracture risk. RNA sequence analysis of the growth plates demonstrated an imbalance in extracellular matrix formation and degradation and impairment of proliferation, differentiation and mineralization processes. Our findings highlight, for the first time, the severe impact of consuming ultra-processed foods on the growing skeleton. This pathology extends far beyond that explained by the known metabolic effects, highlighting bone as a new target for studies of modern diets.

5.
J Fish Biol ; 98(4): 995-1006, 2021 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32239680

RESUMO

Medaka (O. latipes) and zebrafish (D. rerio) are two teleost fish increasingly used as models to study human skeletal diseases. Although they are similar in size, swimming pattern and many other characteristics, these two species are very distant from an evolutionary point of view (by at least 100 million years). A prominent difference between the skeletons of medaka and zebrafish is the total absence of osteocytes in medaka (anosteocytic), while zebrafish bone contains numerous osteocytes (osteocytic). This fundamental difference suggests the possibility that the bony elements of their skeleton may be different in a variety of other aspects, structural, mechanical or both, particularly in heavily loaded bones like the vertebrae. Here we report on the results of a comparative study that aimed to determine the similarities and differences in medaka and zebrafish vertebrae in terms of their macro- to nanostructure, composition and mechanical properties. Our results reveal many similarities between medaka and zebrafish vertebrae, making the lack or presence of osteocytes the only major difference between the bones of these two species.


Assuntos
Oryzias/anatomia & histologia , Coluna Vertebral/anatomia & histologia , Coluna Vertebral/química , Peixe-Zebra/anatomia & histologia , Animais , Osso e Ossos/anatomia & histologia , Osso e Ossos/química , Osteócitos , Coluna Vertebral/fisiologia , Natação
6.
Bone ; 125: 61-73, 2019 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31085351

RESUMO

The bone material of almost all vertebrates contains the same cellular components. These comprise osteoblasts that produce bone, osteoclasts that resorb bone and osteocytes, which are the master regulators of bone metabolism, particularly bone modeling and remodeling. It is thus surprising that the largest group of extant vertebrates, neoteleost fish, lacks osteocytes entirely (anosteocytic bone). Osteocytes are the progeny of osteoblasts, which become entrapped in the osteoid they secrete, then undergo several morphologic and functional changes, to finally form an intricate network of living cells in the bone matrix. While the process of osteogenesis of osteocytic bone has been thoroughly studied, osteogenesis of anosteocytic bone is less well understood. The current paradigm for formation of anosteocytic bone suggests that osteoblasts remain always on the external surface of the formed bone, and do not become entrapped in the osteoid. Such a process requires the osteoblasts to function in a fundamentally-different way from osteoblasts of all other bony vertebrates. Here we present a comparative structural study of the osteocytic bones of zebrafish and anosteocytic bones of medaka and show that they are remarkably similar in structure at several hierarchical levels. Scanning electron microscopy and phase contrast-enhanced µCT reveal the presence of numerous mineralized objects in the matrix of anosteocytic bone. These objects resemble osteocytic lacunae in zebrafish bone, and their locations and distribution are similar to those of osteocytes in zebrafish bone. Our findings provide support for the occurrence of a process of anosteocytic bone osteogenesis that has so far been rejected. In this process osteoblasts become entrapped in the bone matrix (as occurs in osteogenesis of osteocytic bone), but then undergo apoptosis, become mineralized and end up as part of the mineralized bone matrix.


Assuntos
Osteogênese/fisiologia , Animais , Osso e Ossos/citologia , Osso e Ossos/metabolismo , Osso e Ossos/ultraestrutura , Calcificação Fisiológica/fisiologia , Feminino , Masculino , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura , Oryzias , Osteoblastos/citologia , Osteoblastos/metabolismo , Osteoblastos/ultraestrutura , Osteoclastos/citologia , Osteoclastos/metabolismo , Osteoclastos/ultraestrutura , Osteócitos/citologia , Osteócitos/metabolismo , Osteócitos/ultraestrutura , Osteogênese/genética , Peixe-Zebra
7.
PLoS Biol ; 17(2): e3000140, 2019 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30707688

RESUMO

Osteocytes, cells forming an elaborate network within the bones of most vertebrate taxa, are thought to be the master regulators of bone modeling, a process of coordinated, local bone-tissue deposition and removal that keeps bone strains at safe levels throughout life. Neoteleost fish, however, lack osteocytes and yet are known to be capable of bone modeling, although no osteocyte-independent modeling regulatory mechanism has so far been described. Here, we characterize a novel, to our knowledge, bone-modeling regulatory mechanism in a fish species (medaka), showing that although lacking osteocytes (i.e., internal mechanosensors), when loaded, medaka bones model in mechanically directed ways, successfully reducing high tissue strains. We establish that as in mammals, modeling in medaka is regulated by the SOST gene, demonstrating a mechanistic link between skeletal loading, SOST down-regulation, and intense bone deposition. However, whereas mammalian SOST is expressed almost exclusively by osteocytes, in both medaka and zebrafish (a species with osteocytic bones), SOST is expressed by a variety of nonosteocytic cells, none of which reside within the bone bulk. These findings argue that in fishes (and perhaps other vertebrates), nonosteocytic skeletal cells are both sensors and responders, shouldering duties believed exclusive to osteocytes. This previously unrecognized, SOST-dependent, osteocyte-independent mechanism challenges current paradigms of osteocyte exclusivity in bone-modeling regulation, suggesting the existence of multivariate feedback networks in bone modeling-perhaps also in mammalian bones-and thus arguing for the possibility of untapped potential for cell targets in bone therapeutics.


Assuntos
Retroalimentação Fisiológica , Proteínas de Peixes/genética , Glicoproteínas/genética , Mecanotransdução Celular/genética , Oryzias/genética , Osteogênese/genética , Proteínas de Peixe-Zebra/genética , Animais , Fenômenos Biomecânicos , Remodelação Óssea/genética , Osso e Ossos/citologia , Osso e Ossos/metabolismo , Condrócitos/citologia , Condrócitos/metabolismo , Colágeno Tipo I/genética , Colágeno Tipo I/metabolismo , Proteínas de Peixes/metabolismo , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Glicoproteínas/metabolismo , Humanos , Oryzias/metabolismo , Osteoblastos/citologia , Osteoblastos/metabolismo , Osteócitos , Isoformas de Proteínas/genética , Isoformas de Proteínas/metabolismo , Especificidade da Espécie , Natação/fisiologia , Peixe-Zebra/genética , Peixe-Zebra/metabolismo , Proteínas de Peixe-Zebra/metabolismo
8.
Gen Comp Endocrinol ; 235: 64-69, 2016 09 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27288640

RESUMO

In dairy cows, heat stress depresses appetite, leading to decreased food intake, a negative energy balance, and modifies ghrelin levels. Ghrelin is a gut-brain peptide with two major forms: acylated, with an O-n-octanoylated serine in position 3, and nonacylated. To date, the effect of heat stress and estrous cycle on ghrelin secretion in dairy cows has not been studied. We characterized ghrelin secretion during the estrous cycle in each, the winter and the summer seasons. We further examined the effects of parity on ghrelin secretion. Blood was collected from 10 primiparous or multiparous Israeli-Holstein dairy cows throughout the estrous cycle, in both, the hot and cold seasons. The levels of acylated and total ghrelin were measured in the blood samples. We found that both acylated and total ghrelin levels during heat stress were lower than their respective levels in the winter in both, primiparous and multiparous cows. No differences in acylated and total ghrelin levels were found between primiparous and multiparous cows in both seasons. We further found that in multiparous but not primiparous cows acylated ghrelin secretion oscillated during the estrous cycle in both seasons. Its levels peaked on the last days of the first follicular wave and on the days before and during ovulation. Interestingly, we found that elevated acylated ghrelin levels correlated with conception success and increased total ghrelin levels were associated with successful conception from first insemination. Our data is the first to demonstrate seasonal variation in ghrelin secretion. This study provides evidence for the yet unfamiliar link between heat stress, ghrelin and fertility. Increased circulating acylated ghrelin may contribute to improved fertility in dairy cows. It further raises the possibility of a link between ghrelin levels and successful inseminations. Further research is required to determine the effects of ghrelin on dairy cow performance.


Assuntos
Ciclo Estral/fisiologia , Grelina/farmacologia , Paridade/fisiologia , Animais , Bovinos , Feminino , Fertilidade , Resposta ao Choque Térmico , Gravidez , Estações do Ano
9.
Theriogenology ; 86(2): 626-34, 2016 Jul 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27025442

RESUMO

The use of ultrasound imaging for the examination of reproductive organs has contributed substantially to the fertility management of dairy cows around the world. This method has many advantages such as noninvasiveness and immediate availability of information. Adding Doppler index to the ultrasound imaging examination, improved the estimation of blood volume and flow rate to the ovaries in general and to the dominant follicle in particular. The aim of this study was to examine changes in the blood flow to the dominant follicle and compare them to the follicular development throughout the cycle. We further set out to examine the effects of different types of cooling management during the summer on the changes in blood flow to the dominant follicle. For this purpose, 24 Israeli-Holstein dairy cows, under heat stress, were randomly assigned one of two groups: one was exposed to five cooling sessions per day (5CS) and the other to eight cooling sessions per day (8CS). Blood flow to the dominant follicle was measured daily using Doppler index throughout the estrous cycle. No differences in the preovulatory dominant follicle diameter were detected between the two cooling management regimens during the cycle. However, the length of the first follicular wave was significantly longer, whereas the second follicular wave was nonsignificantly shorter in the 5CS group as compared to the 8CS group. In addition, no difference in blood flow was found during the first 18 days of the cycle between the two groups. However, from Day 20 until ovulation a higher rate of blood flow was measured in the ovaries of cows cooled 8 times per day as compared to the 5CS group. No differences in progesterone levels were noted. Finally, the estrous cycle length was shorter in the 8CS group as compared to the 5CS group. Our data suggest that blood flow to the dominant follicle and estrous cycle length is affected by heat stress. Using the appropriate cooling management during heat stress can enhance the blood flow to the ovary and may contribute to improved fertility in dairy cows.


Assuntos
Bovinos/fisiologia , Temperatura Baixa , Ciclo Estral/fisiologia , Temperatura Alta , Folículo Ovariano/fisiologia , Estresse Fisiológico , Criação de Animais Domésticos , Animais , Bovinos/sangue , Feminino , Progesterona/sangue , Fatores de Tempo
10.
Acta Biomater ; 13: 311-23, 2015 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25449924

RESUMO

Fish represent the most diverse and numerous of the vertebrate clades. In contrast to the bones of all tetrapods and evolutionarily primitive fish, many of the evolutionarily more advanced fish have bones that do not contain osteocytes. Here we use a variety of imaging techniques to show that anosteocytic fish bone is composed of a sequence of planar layers containing mainly aligned collagen fibrils, in which the prevailing principal orientation progressively spirals. When the sequence of fibril orientations completes a rotation of around 180°, a thin layer of poorly oriented fibrils is present between it and the next layer. The thick layer of aligned fibrils and the thin layer of non-aligned fibrils constitute a lamella. Although both basic components of mammalian lamellar bone are found here as well, the arrangement is unique, and we therefore call this structure lamellated bone. We further show that the lamellae of anosteocytic fish bone contain an array of dense, small-diameter (1-4 µm) bundles of hypomineralized collagen fibrils that are oriented mostly orthogonal to the lamellar plane. Results of mechanical tests conducted on beams from anosteocytic fish bone and human cortical bone show that the fish bones are less stiff but much tougher than the human bones. We propose that the unique lamellar structure and the orthogonal hypomineralized collagen bundles are responsible for the unusual mechanical properties and mineral distribution in anosteocytic fish bone.


Assuntos
Osso e Ossos/ultraestrutura , Tilápia/anatomia & histologia , Animais , Osso e Ossos/metabolismo , Humanos , Especificidade da Espécie , Tilápia/metabolismo
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(45): 16047-52, 2014 Nov 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25331870

RESUMO

A remarkable property of tetrapod bone is its ability to detect and remodel areas where damage has accumulated through prolonged use. This process, believed vital to the long-term health of bone, is considered to be initiated and orchestrated by osteocytes, cells within the bone matrix. It is therefore surprising that most extant fishes (neoteleosts) lack osteocytes, suggesting their bones are not constantly repaired, although many species exhibit long lives and high activity levels, factors that should induce considerable fatigue damage with time. Here, we show evidence for active and intense remodeling occurring in the anosteocytic, elongated rostral bones of billfishes (e.g., swordfish, marlins). Despite lacking osteocytes, this tissue exhibits a striking resemblance to the mature bone of large mammals, bearing structural features (overlapping secondary osteons) indicating intensive tissue repair, particularly in areas where high loads are expected. Billfish osteons are an order of magnitude smaller in diameter than mammalian osteons, however, implying that the nature of damage in this bone may be different. Whereas billfish bone material is as stiff as mammalian bone (unlike the bone of other fishes), it is able to withstand much greater strains (relative deformations) before failing. Our data show that fish bone can exhibit far more complex structure and physiology than previously known, and is apparently capable of localized repair even without the osteocytes believed essential for this process. These findings challenge the unique and primary role of osteocytes in bone remodeling, a basic tenet of bone biology, raising the possibility of an alternative mechanism driving this process.


Assuntos
Remodelação Óssea/fisiologia , Peixes/fisiologia , Animais , Osteócitos/citologia , Osteócitos/metabolismo
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