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  2. A preliminary study on the mechanism of skeletal abnormalities in Turner syndrome using inducing pluripotent stem cells (iPS)- based disease models

A preliminary study on the mechanism of skeletal abnormalities in Turner syndrome using inducing pluripotent stem cells (iPS)- based disease models

  • Intractable Rare Dis Res. 2019 May;8(2):113-119. doi: 10.5582/irdr.2019.01025.
Xiaoxiao Cui 1 2 Yazhou Cui 2 Liang Shi 2 Jing Luan 2 Xiaoyan Zhou 2 Jinxiang Han 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 School of Medicine and Life Sciences, University of Jinan-Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences, Ji'nan, Chinan.
  • 2 Key Laboratory for Rare Disease Research of Shandong Province, Key Laboratory for Biotech Drugs of the Ministry of Health, Shandong Medical Biotechnological Center, Shandong Academy of Medical Sciences, Ji'nan, China.
Abstract

Osteoporosis represent one of main characteristics of Turner syndrome (TS), a rare diseases caused by aberrant deletion of X chromosomes, however, the underlying pathological mechanism remains unknown yet. In this study, we used pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from a Turner syndrome patient and a health control to induce functional osteoblasts and osteoclasts, in order to compare their difference in these two differentiation. We successfully produced functional osteoblasts and osteoclasts from iPSCs through embryoid bodies (EBs) and mesoderm stages, as demonstrated obvious mineralized nodules and multi-nuclear giant cells with positive tartrate-resistant Acid Phosphatase (TRAP) staining, and significant up-regulated differentiation marker genes. Interestingly, we found that there was no significant difference in phenotype and marker genes expression between osteoblasts from Turner syndrome and healthy control iPSCs. In contrast, Turner syndrome showed increased osteoclastogenesis compared to the healthy control indicating higher frequency of multi-nuclear TRAP staining cells and elevated osteoclast marker genes TRAP, MMP9, CA2, OSCAR. Therefore, our results suggest that the low bone density of Turner syndrome patients may be caused by aberrant osteoclast differentiation, and further investigation towards osteoclast function under Turner syndrome is deserved.

Keywords

Turner syndrome; induced pluripotent stem cells; osteoblasts; osteoclasts.

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