1. Oral citrate supplementation mitigates age-associated pathological intervertebral disc calcification in LG/J mice.
- Author
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Ottone OK, Mundo JJ, Kwakye BN, Slaweski A, Collins JA, Wu Q, Connelly MA, Niaziorimi F, van de Wetering K, and Risbud MV
- Abstract
Despite the high prevalence of age-dependent intervertebral disc calcification, there is a glaring lack of treatment options for this debilitating pathology. Here, we investigate the efficacy of long-term oral K
3 Citrate supplementation in ameliorating disc calcification in LG/J mice, a model of spontaneous age-associated disc calcification. K3 Citrate successfully reduced the incidence of disc calcification in LG/J mice without deleterious effects on vertebral bone structure, plasma chemistry, and locomotion. Notably, a positive effect on grip strength was evident in treated mice. Spectroscopic investigation of the persisting calcified nodules indicated K3 Citrate did not alter the mineral composition and revealed that reactivation of an endochondral differentiation program in endplates may drive LG/J disc calcification. Importantly, K3 Citrate reduced calcification incidence without altering the pathological endplate chondrocyte hypertrophy, suggesting mitigation of disc calcification primarily occurred through Ca2+ chelation, a conclusion supported by chondrogenic differentiation and Seahorse metabolic assays. Overall, this study underscores the therapeutic potential of K3 Citrate as a systemic intervention strategy for disc calcification.- Published
- 2024
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