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Dive into the research topics where Brya G. Matthews is active.

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Featured researches published by Brya G. Matthews.


Stem Cells | 2012

In vivo Fate Mapping identifies Mesenchymal Progenitor Cells

Danka Grčević; Slavica Pejda; Brya G. Matthews; Dario Repić; Liping Wang; Haitao Li; Mark S. Kronenberg; Xi Jiang; Peter Maye; Douglas J. Adams; David W. Rowe; Hector L. Aguila; Ivo Kalajzic

Adult mesenchymal progenitor cells have enormous potential for use in regenerative medicine. However, the true identity of the progenitors in vivo and their progeny has not been precisely defined. We hypothesize that cells expressing a smooth muscle α‐actin promoter (αSMA)‐directed Cre transgene represent mesenchymal progenitors of adult bone tissue. By combining complementary colors in combination with transgenes activating at mature stages of the lineage, we characterized the phenotype and confirmed the ability of isolated αSMA+ cells to progress from a progenitor to fully mature state. In vivo lineage tracing experiments using a new bone formation model confirmed the osteogenic phenotype of αSMA+ cells. In vitro analysis of the in vivo‐labeled SMA9+ cells supported their differentiation potential into mesenchymal lineages. Using a fracture‐healing model, αSMA9+ cells served as a pool of fibrocartilage and skeletal progenitors. Confirmation of the transition of αSMA9+ progenitor cells to mature osteoblasts during fracture healing was assessed by activation of bone‐specific Col2.3emd transgene. Our findings provide a novel in vivo identification of defined population of mesenchymal progenitor cells with active role in bone remodeling and regeneration. STEM CELLS 2012; 30:187–196.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2006

Differential Gene Expression in Cultured Osteoblasts and Bone Marrow Stromal Cells From Patients With Paget's Disease of Bone†

Dorit Naot; Usha Bava; Brya G. Matthews; Karen E. Callon; G. Gamble; Michael Black; Sarah Song; Rocco P. Pitto; Tim Cundy; J. Cornish; Ian R. Reid

Pagets disease is a focal condition of bone. To study changes in cells within pagetic lesions, we cultured osteoblasts and stromal cells from 22 patients and compared gene expression in these cells to cells from healthy bone. We identified several differentially regulated genes, and we suggest that these changes could lead to the formation of the lesions.


Bone | 2013

In vitro and in vivo approaches to study osteocyte biology

Ivo Kalajzic; Brya G. Matthews; Elena Torreggiani; Marie A. Harris; Paola Divieti Pajevic; Stephen E. Harris

Osteocytes, the most abundant cell population of the bone lineage, have been a major focus in the bone research field in recent years. This population of cells that resides within mineralized matrix is now thought to be the mechanosensory cell in bone and plays major roles in the regulation of bone formation and resorption. Studies of osteocytes had been impaired by their location, resulting in numerous attempts to isolate primary osteocytes and to generate cell lines representative of the osteocytic phenotype. Progress has been achieved in recent years by utilizing in vivo genetic technology and generation of osteocyte directed transgenic and gene deficiency mouse models. We will provide an overview of the current in vitro and in vivo models utilized to study osteocyte biology. We discuss generation of osteocyte-like cell lines and isolation of primary osteocytes and summarize studies that have utilized these cellular models to understand the functional role of osteocytes. Approaches that attempt to selectively identify and isolate osteocytes using fluorescent protein reporters driven by regulatory elements of genes that are highly expressed in osteocytes will be discussed. In addition, recent in vivo studies utilizing overexpression or conditional deletion of various genes using dentin matrix protein (Dmp1) directed Cre recombinase are outlined. In conclusion, evaluation of the benefits and deficiencies of currently used cell lines/genetic models in understanding osteocyte biology underlines the current progress in this field. The future efforts will be directed towards developing novel in vitro and in vivo models that would additionally facilitate in understanding the multiple roles of osteocytes.


Blood | 2014

Inhibition of leukemia cell engraftment and disease progression in mice by osteoblasts

Maria Krevvata; Barbara C. Silva; John S. Manavalan; Marta Galán-Díez; Aruna Kode; Brya G. Matthews; David Park; Chiyuan A. Zhang; Naomi Galili; Thomas L. Nickolas; David W. Dempster; William C. Dougall; Julie Teruya-Feldstein; Aris N. Economides; Ivo Kalajzic; Azra Raza; Ellin Berman; Siddhartha Mukherjee; Govind Bhagat; Stavroula Kousteni

The bone marrow niche is thought to act as a permissive microenvironment required for emergence or progression of hematologic cancers. We hypothesized that osteoblasts, components of the niche involved in hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) function, influence the fate of leukemic blasts. We show that osteoblast numbers decrease by 55% in myelodysplasia and acute myeloid leukemia patients. Further, genetic depletion of osteoblasts in mouse models of acute leukemia increased circulating blasts and tumor engraftment in the marrow and spleen leading to higher tumor burden and shorter survival. Myelopoiesis increased and was coupled with a reduction in B lymphopoiesis and compromised erythropoiesis, suggesting that hematopoietic lineage/progression was altered. Treatment of mice with acute myeloid or lymphoblastic leukemia with a pharmacologic inhibitor of the synthesis of duodenal serotonin, a hormone suppressing osteoblast numbers, inhibited loss of osteoblasts. Maintenance of the osteoblast pool restored normal marrow function, reduced tumor burden, and prolonged survival. Leukemia prevention was attributable to maintenance of osteoblast numbers because inhibition of serotonin receptors alone in leukemic blasts did not affect leukemia progression. These results suggest that osteoblasts play a fundamental role in propagating leukemia in the marrow and may be a therapeutic target to induce hostility of the niche to leukemia blasts.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

Failure to Detect Measles Virus Ribonucleic Acid in Bone Cells from Patients with Paget’s Disease

Brya G. Matthews; Muhammad Afzal; Philip D. Minor; Usha Bava; Karen E. Callon; Rocco P. Pitto; Tim Cundy; J. Cornish; Ian R. Reid; Dorit Naot

BACKGROUND Pagets disease is a condition of focal accelerated bone turnover. Electron-microscopy investigations of osteoclasts from pagetic lesions have identified nuclear inclusion bodies that have a similar appearance to viral nucleocapsid particles. Subsequently, RNA from several paramyxoviruses has been detected in pagetic tissue, and it was suggested that these viruses, in particular measles, might play a role in the etiology of Pagets disease. We have tested for measles virus sequences in osteoblasts and bone marrow cells collected from pagetic lesions and healthy bone. METHODS Bone and bone marrow samples were taken from Pagets patients and control subjects, and cells were cultured from each of these tissues. RNA was extracted from 13 osteoblast cultures and 13 cultures of bone marrow cells derived from pagetic lesions, and from 26 and 23 control osteoblast and bone marrow cultures, respectively. These samples were sourced from 22 patients with Pagets disease and 31 controls. RT-PCR-nested PCR amplification was used for the detection of the genes for the measles nucleocapsid and matrix proteins. RESULTS Measles virus sequences were not detected in any of the pagetic or control samples. However, measles virus sequences were identified in samples of a measles virus culture isolate included as a positive control, and in a brain sample from a patient with subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, a condition associated with chronic measles infection. CONCLUSION The results of the study do not support the hypothesis that measles virus plays a role in the pathogenesis of Pagets disease.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2014

Analysis of αSMA-Labeled Progenitor Cell Commitment Identifies Notch Signaling as an Important Pathway in Fracture Healing

Brya G. Matthews; Danka Grčević; Liping Wang; Yusuke Hagiwara; Hrvoje Roguljić; Pujan Joshi; Dong-Guk Shin; Douglas J. Adams; Ivo Kalajzic

Fracture healing is a regenerative process that involves coordinated responses of many cell types, but characterization of the roles of specific cell populations in this process has been limited. We have identified alpha smooth muscle actin (αSMA) as a marker of a population of mesenchymal progenitor cells in the periosteum that contributes to osteochondral elements during fracture healing. Using a lineage tracing approach, we labeled αSMA‐expressing cells, and characterized changes in the periosteal population during the early stages of fracture healing by histology, flow cytometry, and gene expression profiling. In response to fracture, the αSMA‐labeled population expanded and began to differentiate toward the osteogenic and chondrogenic lineages. The frequency of mesenchymal progenitor cell markers such as Sca1 and PDGFRα increased after fracture. By 6 days after fracture, genes involved in matrix production and remodeling were elevated. In contrast, genes associated with muscle contraction and Notch signaling were downregulated after fracture. We confirmed that activating Notch signaling in αSMA‐labeled cells inhibited differentiation into osteogenic and adipogenic lineages in vitro and ectopic bone formation in vivo. By characterizing changes in a selected αSMA‐labeled progenitor cell population during fracture callus formation, we have shown that modulation of Notch signaling may determine osteogenic potential of αSMA‐expressing progenitor cells during bone healing.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Lineage tracing of resident tendon progenitor cells during growth and natural healing.

Nathaniel A. Dyment; Yusuke Hagiwara; Brya G. Matthews; Yingcui Li; Ivo Kalajzic; David W. Rowe

Unlike during embryogenesis, the identity of tissue resident progenitor cells that contribute to postnatal tendon growth and natural healing is poorly characterized. Therefore, we utilized 1) an inducible Cre driven by alpha smooth muscle actin (SMACreERT2), that identifies mesenchymal progenitors, 2) a constitutively active Cre driven by growth and differentiation factor 5 (GDF5Cre), a critical regulator of joint condensation, in combination with 3) an Ai9 Cre reporter to permanently label SMA9 and GDF5-9 populations and their progeny. In growing mice, SMA9+ cells were found in peritendinous structures and scleraxis-positive (ScxGFP+) cells within the tendon midsubstance and myotendinous junction. The progenitors within the tendon midsubstance were transiently labeled as they displayed a 4-fold expansion from day 2 to day 21 but reduced to baseline levels by day 70. SMA9+ cells were not found within tendon entheses or ligaments in the knee, suggesting a different origin. In contrast to the SMA9 population, GDF5-9+ cells extended from the bone through the enthesis and into a portion of the tendon midsubstance. GDF5-9+ cells were also found throughout the length of the ligaments, indicating a significant variation in the progenitors that contribute to tendons and ligaments. Following tendon injury, SMA9+ paratenon cells were the main contributors to the healing response. SMA9+ cells extended over the defect space at 1 week and differentiated into ScxGFP+ cells at 2 weeks, which coincided with increased collagen signal in the paratenon bridge. Thus, SMA9-labeled cells represent a unique progenitor source that contributes to the tendon midsubstance, paratenon, and myotendinous junction during growth and natural healing, while GDF5 progenitors contribute to tendon enthesis and ligament development. Understanding the mechanisms that regulate the expansion and differentiation of these progenitors may prove crucial to improving future repair strategies.


Bone | 2010

Molecular mechanisms involved in the mitogenic effect of lactoferrin in osteoblasts

Dorit Naot; Ashika Chhana; Brya G. Matthews; Karen E. Callon; Pak Cheung Tong; Jian-Ming Lin; Jessica L. Costa; Maureen Watson; Andrew Grey; Jillian Cornish

Lactoferrin, an iron-binding glycoprotein present in milk and other exocrine secretions in mammals, is anabolic to bone at physiological concentrations. Lactoferrin stimulates the proliferation, differentiation and survival of osteoblasts, as well as potently inhibiting osteoclastogenesis in bone marrow cultures. In the current study we further investigated the mechanism of action of lactoferrin in osteoblasts. We used low-density arrays to measure the level of expression of 45 genes in MC3T3-E1 osteoblast-like cells treated with lactoferrin, and identified transient, dose-dependent increases in the transcription levels of interleukin-6, of the pro-inflammatory factor prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 (Ptgs2), and of the transcription factor nuclear factor of activated T cells (Nfatc1). We demonstrated similar changes in primary osteoblast cultures from human and rat. Levels of prostaglandin E2 were increased in conditioned media collected from osteoblasts treated with lactoferrin, indicating that the activity of the enzyme cyclooxygenase 2 (COX2), which is encoded by Ptgs2, was also up-regulated. Using a luciferase reporter construct we showed that lactoferrin induced transcription from the NFAT consensus sequence. We found that inhibiting either COX2 or NFATc1 activity blocked the mitogenic effect of lactoferrin in osteoblasts and that inhibition of NFATc1 activity partially blocked the transcriptional activation of Ptgs2. Our study has provided the first evidence that COX2 and NFATc1 activities are increased by lactoferrin, and demonstrated a role for each of these molecules as mediators of the mitogenic effects of lactoferrin in osteoblasts.


Journal of Dental Research | 2013

In vivo Identification of Periodontal Progenitor Cells

Hrvoje Roguljić; Brya G. Matthews; W. Yang; Hrvoje Cvija; Mina Mina; Ivo Kalajzic

The periodontal ligament contains progenitor cells; however, their identity and differentiation potential in vivo remain poorly characterized. Previous results have suggested that periodontal tissue progenitors reside in perivascular areas. Therefore, we utilized a lineage-tracing approach to identify and track periodontal progenitor cells from the perivascular region in vivo. We used an alpha-smooth muscle actin (αSMA) promoter-driven and tamoxifen-inducible Cre system (αSMACreERT2) that, in combination with a reporter mouse line (Ai9), permanently labels a cell population, termed ‘SMA9’. To trace the differentiation of SMA9-labeled cells into osteoblasts/cementoblasts, we utilized a Col2.3GFP transgene, while expression of Scleraxis-GFP was used to follow differentiation into periodontal ligament fibroblasts during normal tissue formation and remodeling following injury. In uninjured three-week-old SMA9 mice, tamoxifen labeled a small population of cells in the periodontal ligament that expanded over time, particularly in the apical region of the root. By 17 days and 7 weeks after labeling, some SMA9-labeled cells expressed markers indicating differentiation into mature lineages, including cementocytes. Following injury, SMA9 cells expanded, and differentiated into cementoblasts, osteoblasts, and periodontal ligament fibroblasts. SMA9-labeled cells represent a source of progenitors that can give rise to mature osteoblasts, cementoblasts, and fibroblasts within the periodontium.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2009

Absence of Somatic SQSTM1 Mutations in Paget’s Disease of Bone

Brya G. Matthews; Dorit Naot; Usha Bava; Karen E. Callon; Rocco P. Pitto; Stuart A. McCowan; Diana Wattie; Tim Cundy; J. Cornish; Ian R. Reid

BACKGROUND Pagets disease is a common focal bone disorder that appears to be caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors. Mutations in the SQSTM1 gene are found in about one third of families with Pagets disease and 8% of sporadic cases. Other potential loci linked to the disease have also been identified, and a number of environmental factors have been suggested to be involved in the disease. However, the focal nature of Pagets is still unexplained. Therefore, we examined the possibility that somatic mutations in the SQSTM1 gene are present in the local lesions, using RNA collected from primary osteoblast and bone marrow cell cultures of patients with this condition. METHODS SQSTM1 was sequenced, and allelic discrimination for the common P392L mutation was performed in cDNA samples from 14 osteoblast cultures and from 14 cultures of bone marrow cells. RESULTS In these 28 samples drawn from 23 patients, the wild-type sequence of SQSTM1 was found in all but one marrow sample, which was heterozygous for the P392L mutation. DNA from peripheral blood in this subject had an identical sequence of SQSTM1, indicating that this was a germline mutation. CONCLUSION We conclude that somatic mutations for SQSTM1 are not commonly present in Pagets disease.

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Ivo Kalajzic

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Dorit Naot

University of Auckland

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J. Cornish

University of Auckland

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David W. Rowe

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Tim Cundy

University of Auckland

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Douglas J. Adams

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Igor Matić

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Liping Wang

University of Connecticut Health Center

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