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Battling Brittle Bones ... With Broccoli and Spinach?
Engineering Researchers at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute Pinpoint the Origin of Bone
Fractures
A new study from engineering researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
shows, for the first time, how the little-understood protein
osteocalcin plays a significant role in the strength of our
bones. The findings could lead to new strategies and
therapeutics for fighting osteoporosis and lowering the risk of
bone fracture.
Funded by the U.S. National Institutes of
Health, the study details how fractures in healthy bones
begin with the creation of incredibly tiny holes, each
measuring only about 500 atoms in diameter, within the bone’s
mineral structure. In the case of a slip, trip, or fall, the
force of the impact on a bone physically deforms a pair of
joined proteins, osteopontin and osteocalcin, and results in
the formation of nanoscale holes. These holes, called
dilatational bands, function as a natural defense mechanism,
and help to prevent further damage to the surrounding bone.
However, if the force of the impact is too great—or if the bone
is lacking osteopontin, osteocalcin, or both—the bone will
crack and fracture.
The multi-university study, led by Deepak Vashishth, head of
the Department of Biomedical
Engineering at Rensselaer, is the first to give evidence of
fracture at the level of bone’s nanostructure. Partnering with
Rensselaer on the study were Villanova University, the Hospital
for Special Surgery in New York, and Yale University.
“This study is important because it implicates, for the
first time, the role of osteocalcin in giving bone the ability
to resist fracture,” Vashishth said.
“Since osteocalcin is always the point of fracture, we believe
that strengthening it could lead to a strengthening of the
overall bone.”
Long known but little understood, the protein osteocalin has
been produced by and present in animal bones since before the
dawn of humanity. Recently, abnormalities in ostoecalcin
production have been associated with type 2 diabetes as well as
problems in reproductive health. Vashishth’s new study,
however, is the first to explain the structural and mechanical
importance of osteocalcin in bone.
Now that osteocalcin is known to participate in bone
fracture, new strategies for strengthening the bond between
osteocalin and osteopontin can be investigated, Vashishth said.
Augmenting the body’s natural supply of osteocalcin, for
example, could be one possible strategy for treating
osteoporosis and other conditions leading to increased fracture
risk, he said. Osteocalin must be in its carboxylated form to
get absorbed into bone, and the protein is carboxylated by
vitamin K. Vashishth said future studies could investigate the
relation between vitamin K intake, osteocalcin, and bone
strength.
“Currently, all of the advice for treating osteoporosis is
related to calcium. We believe there’s more to the story than
just calcium, and the results of this new study raise an
important question about vitamin K. Leafy green vegetables are
the best source of vitamin K—wouldn’t it be great if eating
spinach and broccoli was not only healthy, but also good for
your bones? We plan to investigate this link in future,”
Vashisth said.
Results of the new study, titled “Dilatational band
formation in bone,” were recently published online by
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and
will appear in an upcoming print edition of the journal. The
study may be viewed online at:
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2012/10/31/1201513109.full.pdf
At Rensselaer, this research was conducted in the
laboratories of the Center for Biotechnology and
Interdisciplinary Studies.
Along with Vashisth, co-authors of the paper are Rensselaer
BME graduate students Atharva Poundarik and, Tamim Diab, BME
post-doctoral fellows Grazyna Sroga, and Ani Ural (currently a
faculty member at Villanova University), Adele Boskey of the
Musculoskeletal Integrity Program at the Hospital for Special
Surgery in New York, and Caren Gundberg of the Department of
Orthopedics and Rehabilitation at Yale University.
For more information on Vashishth and his research at
Rensselaer, visit:
Faculty Home Page
http://faculty.rpi.edu/node/1101
New Technique Yields Troves of Information From
Nanoscale Bone Samples
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2891
Proteins To Yield New Clues in Fight Against
Osteoporosis
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2771
Rensselaer Professor Deepak Vashishth Named Fellow
of AIMBE
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2954
Rensselaer Department of Biomedical
Engineering
http://www.bme.rpi.edu/
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Published
December 11,
2012 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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