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Lead Acetate-Injected Mice is an Animal Model for Extrapolation of Calcifying Response to Humans Due to Low Involvement of Bone Resorption.

Authors :
Morikane, Shota
Ishida, Koichi
Ashizawa, Naoki
Taniguchi, Tetsuya
Matsubayashi, Masaya
Kurita, Naoki
Kobashi, Seiichi
Iwanaga, Takashi
Source :
Calcified Tissue International. Sep2024, Vol. 115 Issue 3, p315-327. 13p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Vascular calcification affects the prognosis of patients with renal failure. Bisphosphonates are regarded as candidate anti-calcifying drugs because of their inhibitory effects on both calcium-phosphate aggregation and bone resorption. However, calcification in well-known rodent models is dependent upon bone resorption accompanied by excessive bone turnover, making it difficult to estimate accurately the anti-calcifying potential of drugs. Therefore, models with low bone resorption are required to extrapolate anti-calcifying effects to humans. Three bisphosphonates (etidronate, alendronate, and FYB-931) were characterised for their inhibitory effects on bone resorption in vivo and calcium-phosphate aggregation estimated by calciprotein particle formation in vitro. Then, their effects were examined using two models inducing ectopic calcification: the site where lead acetate was subcutaneously injected into mice and the transplanted, aorta obtained from a donor rat. The inhibitory effects of bisphosphonates on bone resorption and calcium-phosphate aggregation were alendronate > FYB-931 > etidronate and FYB-931 > alendronate = etidronate, respectively. In the lead acetate-induced model, calcification was most potently suppressed by FYB-931, followed by alendronate and etidronate. In the aorta-transplanted model, only FYB-931 suppressed calcification at a high dose. In both the models, no correlation was observed between calcification and bone resorption marker, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRACP). Results from the lead acetate-induced model showed that inhibitory potency against calcium-phosphate aggregation contributed to calcification inhibition. The two calcification models, especially the lead acetate-induced model, may be ideal for the extrapolation of calcifying response to humans because of calcium-phosphate aggregation rather than bone resorption as its mechanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0171967X
Volume :
115
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Calcified Tissue International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179087723
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00223-024-01245-w