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Dive into the research topics where F. Patrick Ross is active.

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Featured researches published by F. Patrick Ross.


Blood | 2010

Bone loss caused by iron overload in a murine model: importance of oxidative stress.

Jaime Tsay; Zheiwei Yang; F. Patrick Ross; Susanna Cunningham-Rundles; Hong Lin; Rhima M. Coleman; Philipp Mayer-Kuckuk; Stephen B. Doty; Robert W. Grady; Patricia J. Giardina; Adele L. Boskey; Maria G. Vogiatzi

Osteoporosis is a frequent problem in disorders characterized by iron overload, such as the thalassemias and hereditary hemochromatosis. The exact role of iron in the development of osteoporosis in these disorders is not established. To define the effect of iron excess in bone, we generated an iron-overloaded mouse by injecting iron dextran at 2 doses into C57/BL6 mice for 2 months. Compared with the placebo group, iron-overloaded mice exhibited dose-dependent increased tissue iron content, changes in bone composition, and trabecular and cortical thinning of bone accompanied by increased bone resorption. Iron-overloaded mice had increased reactive oxygen species and elevated serum tumor necrosis factor-α and interleukin-6 concentrations that correlated with severity of iron overload. Treatment of iron-overloaded mice with the antioxidant N-acetyl-L-cysteine prevented the development of trabecular but not cortical bone abnormalities. This is the first study to demonstrate that iron overload in mice results in increased bone resorption and oxidative stress, leading to changes in bone microarchitecture and material properties and thus bone loss.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

TREM2 and β-Catenin Regulate Bone Homeostasis by Controlling the Rate of Osteoclastogenesis

Karel Otero; Masahiro Shinohara; Haibo Zhao; Marina Cella; Susan Gilfillan; Angela Colucci; Roberta Faccio; F. Patrick Ross; Steve L. Teitelbaum; Hiroshi Takayanagi; Marco Colonna

TREM2 is an immunoreceptor expressed on osteoclasts (OC) and microglia that transmits intracellular signals through the adaptor DAP12. Individuals with genetic mutations inactivating TREM2 or DAP12 develop the Nasu–Hakola disease (NHD) with cystic-like lesions of the bone and brain demyelination that lead to fractures and presenile dementia. The mechanisms of this disease are poorly understood. In this study, we report that TREM2-deficient mice have an osteopenic phenotype reminiscent of NHD. In vitro, lack of TREM2 impairs proliferation and β-catenin activation in osteoclast precursors (OcP) in response to M-CSF. This defect results in accelerated differentiation of OcP into mature OC. Corroborating the importance of a balanced proliferation and differentiation of OcP for bone homeostasis, we show that conditional deletion of β-catenin in OcP also results in reduced OcP proliferation and accelerated osteoclastogenesis in vitro as well as osteopenia in vivo. These results reveal that TREM2 regulates the rate of osteoclastogenesis and provide a mechanism for the bone pathology in NHD.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2013

Orthopedic wear debris mediated inflammatory osteolysis is mediated in part by NALP3 inflammasome activation

Lyndsey Burton; Daniel Paget; Nikolaus B. Binder; Krista Bohnert; Bryan J. Nestor; Thomas P. Sculco; Laura Santambrogio; F. Patrick Ross; Steven R. Goldring; P. Edward Purdue

Activation of myeloid cells by orthopedic particulate debris is a key event in the pathogenesis of periprosthetic osteolysis and implant loosening after total joint replacement (TJR). Several lines of evidence implicate NACHT, LRR, and PYD domains‐containing protein 3 (NALP3) inflammasome‐mediated production of interleukin 1 beta (IL‐1β) in the pathogenesis of clinical disorders ascribable to foreign particulate materials, including asbestos, silica, and urate crystals. Recent reports indicate that orthopedic polymer products and metallic particulates and ions may activate the same pathway. Here, we investigated the contribution of the NALP3 inflammasome to the pathogenesis of peri‐implant osteolysis. Pharmaceutical and genetic perturbations of caspase‐1 and inflammasome components were used to assess the role of the NALP3 inflammasome in IL‐1β production and osteoclast formation by human monocytes and mouse macrophages in response to polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) particle phagocytosis. The role of caspase‐1 in a mouse calvarial model of particle‐mediated osteolysis was assessed using µCT. Phagocytosis of PMMA particles induces caspase‐1 dependent release of IL‐1β from human monocytes and mouse macrophages. Importantly, using macrophages from mice deficient in components of the NALP3 inflammasome, we show PMMA‐induced IL‐1β production is strictly dependent on these components. Mice lacking caspase‐1, the sole effector of the NALP3 inflammasome, show reduced orthopedic wear particle‐induced calvarial osteolysis compared to wild‐type controls. Absence of NALP3 inflammasome components fails to alter osteoclast formation in vitro. Our findings identify the NALP3 inflammasome as a critical mediator of orthopedic wear‐induced osteolysis and as a viable therapeutic target for the treatment of periprosthetic osteolysis.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2014

Female mice lacking estrogen receptor-alpha in osteoblasts have compromised bone mass and strength.

Katherine M Melville; Natalie H. Kelly; Sohaib A. Khan; John C. Schimenti; F. Patrick Ross; Russell P. Main; Marjolein C. H. van der Meulen

Reduced bioavailability of estrogen increases skeletal fracture risk in postmenopausal women, but the mechanisms by which estrogen regulates bone mass are incompletely understood. Because estrogen signaling in bone acts, in part, through estrogen receptor alpha (ERα), mice with global deletion of ERα (ERαKO) have been used to determine the role of estrogen signaling in bone biology. These animals, however, have confounding systemic effects arising from other organs, such as increased estrogen and decreased insulin‐like growth factor 1 (IGF‐1) serum levels, which may independently affect bone. Mice with tissue‐specific ERα deletion in chondrocytes, osteoblasts, osteocytes, or osteoclasts lack the systemic effects seen in the global knockout, but show that presence of the receptor is important for the function of each cell type. Although bone mass is reduced when ERα is deleted from osteoblasts, no study has determined if this approach reduces whole bone strength. To address this issue, we generated female osteoblast‐specific ERαKO mice (pOC‐ERαKO) by crossing mice expressing a floxed ERα gene (ERαfl/fl) with mice transgenic for the osteocalcin‐Cre promoter (OC‐Cre). Having confirmed that serum levels of estrogen and IGF‐1 were unaltered, we focused on relating bone mechanics to skeletal phenotype using whole bone mechanical testing, microcomputed tomography, histology, and dynamic histomorphometry. At 12 and 18 weeks of age, pOC‐ERαKO mice had decreased cancellous bone mass in the proximal tibia, vertebra, and distal femur, and decreased cortical bone mass in the tibial midshaft, distal femoral cortex, and L5 vertebral cortex. Osteoblast activity was reduced in cancellous bone of the proximal tibia, but osteoclast number was unaffected. Both femora and vertebrae had decreased whole bone strength in mechanical tests to failure, indicating that ERα in osteoblasts is required for appropriate bone mass and strength accrual in female mice. This pOC‐ERαKO mouse is an important animal model that could enhance our understanding of estrogen signaling in bone cells in vivo.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Targeting the Giant Cell Tumor Stromal Cell: Functional Characterization and a Novel Therapeutic Strategy

Matthew R. Steensma; Wakenda Tyler; Allison G. Shaber; Steven R. Goldring; F. Patrick Ross; Bart O. Williams; John H. Healey; P. Edward Purdue

Giant cell tumor of bone (GCTB) is a benign, locally destructive neoplasm, with tumors comprised of mesenchymal fibroblast-like stromal cells; monocytic, mononuclear cells of myeloid lineage; and the characteristic osteoclast-like, multinucleated giant cells. Hampering the study of the complex interaction of its constituent cell types is the propensity of longstanding, repeatedly passaged cell cultures to undergo phenotypic alteration and loss of osteoclast-inducing capacities. In this study, we employed a novel, single-step technique to purify freshly harvested stromal cells using a CD14-negative selection column. Using 9 freshly harvested GCTB specimens and the purified stromal cell component, we performed analyses for markers of osteoblast lineage and analyzed the capacity of the stromal cells to undergo osteoblastic differentiation and induce osteoclastogenesis in co-cultures with monocytic cells. Successful purification of the CD14-negative stromal cells was confirmed via flow cytometric analysis and immunocytochemistry. Osteogenic media upregulated the expression of osteocalcin, suggesting an osteoblastic lineage of the GCTB stromal cells. The effects of the Wnt pathway agonist, SB415286, and recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)-2 on osteoblastogenesis varied among samples. Notably, osteogenic media and SB415286 reversed the receptor activator of NF-κB ligand (RANKL)/osteoprotegerin (OPG) expression ratio resulting in diminished osteoclastogenic capacity. Recombinant human BMP2 had the opposite effect, resulting in enhanced and sustained support of osteoclastogenesis. Targeting the giant cell tumor stromal cell may be an effective adjunct to existing anti-resorptive strategies.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2015

Effects of Deletion of ERα in Osteoblast-Lineage Cells on Bone Mass and Adaptation to Mechanical Loading Differ in Female and Male Mice

Katherine M Melville; Natalie H. Kelly; Gina Surita; Daniel B Buchalter; John C. Schimenti; Russell P. Main; F. Patrick Ross; Marjolein C. H. van der Meulen

Estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) has been implicated in bones response to mechanical loading in both males and females. ERα in osteoblast lineage cells is important for determining bone mass, but results depend on animal sex and the cellular stage at which ERα is deleted. We demonstrated previously that when ERα is deleted from mature osteoblasts and osteocytes in mixed‐background female mice, bone mass and strength are decreased. However, few studies exist examining the skeletal response to loading in bone cell–specific ERαKO mice. Therefore, we crossed ERα floxed (ERαfl/fl) and osteocalcin‐Cre (OC‐Cre) mice to generate animals lacking ERα in mature osteoblasts and osteocytes (pOC‐ERαKO) and littermate controls (LC). At 10 weeks of age, the left tibia was loaded in vivo for 2 weeks. We analyzed bone mass through micro‐CT, bone formation rate by dynamic histomorphometry, bone strength from mechanical testing, and osteoblast and osteoclast activity by serum chemistry and immunohistochemistry. ERα in mature osteoblasts differentially regulated bone mass in males and females. Compared with LC, female pOC‐ERαKO mice had decreased cortical and cancellous bone mass, whereas male pOC‐ERαKO mice had equal or greater bone mass than LC. Bone mass results correlated with decreased compressive strength in pOC‐ERαKO female L5 vertebrae and with increased maximum moment in pOC‐ERαKO male femora. Female pOC‐ERαKO mice responded more to mechanical loading, whereas the response of pOC‐ERαKO male animals was similar to their littermate controls.


Bone | 2016

Transcriptional profiling of cortical versus cancellous bone from mechanically-loaded murine tibiae reveals differential gene expression

Natalie H. Kelly; John C. Schimenti; F. Patrick Ross; Marjolein C. H. van der Meulen

Mechanical loading is an anabolic stimulus that increases bone mass, and thus a promising method to counteract osteoporosis-related bone loss. The mechanism of this anabolism remains unclear, and needs to be established for both cortical and cancellous envelopes individually. We hypothesized that cortical and cancellous bone display different gene expression profiles at baseline and in response to mechanical loading. To test this hypothesis, the left tibiae of 10-week-old female C57Bl/6 mice were subjected to one session of axial tibial compression (9N, 1200cycles, 4Hz triangle waveform) and euthanized 3 and 24h following loading. The right limb served as the contralateral control. We performed RNA-seq on marrow-free metaphyseal samples from the cortical shell and the cancellous core to determine differential gene expression at baseline (control limb) and in response to load. Differential expression was verified with qPCR. Cortical and cancellous bone exhibited distinctly different transcriptional profiles basally and in response to mechanical loading. More genes were differentially expressed with loading at 24h with more genes downregulated at 24h than at 3h in both tissues. Enhanced Wnt signaling dominated the response in cortical bone at 3 and 24h, but in cancellous bone only at 3h. In cancellous bone at 24h many muscle-related genes were downregulated. These findings reveal key differences between cortical and cancellous genetic regulation in response to mechanical loading. Future studies at different time points and multiple loading sessions will add to our knowledge of cortical and cancellous mechanotransduction with the potential to identify new targets for mouse genetic knockout studies and drugs to treat osteoporosis.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2011

Bone matrix regulates osteoclast differentiation and annexin A8 gene expression

Tania N. Crotti; Regina P. O'Sullivan; Zhenxin Shen; Merrilee R. Flannery; Roberto J. Fajardo; F. Patrick Ross; Steven R. Goldring; Kevin P. McHugh

While attachment to bone is required for optimal osteoclast function, the molecular events that underlie this fact are unclear, other than that the cell requires adhesion to mineralized matrix to assume a fully differentiated phenotype. To address this issue, we cultured murine bone marrow‐derived osteoclasts on either cell culture plastic or devitalized mouse calvariae to identify the distinct genetic profile induced by interaction with bone. Among a number of genes previously unknown to be expressed in osteoclasts we found that Annexin A8 (AnxA8) mRNA was markedly up‐regulated by bone. AnxA8 protein was present at high levels in osteoclasts present in human tissues recovered from sites of pathological bone loss. The presence of bone mineral was required for up‐regulation of AnxA8 mRNA since osteoclasts plated on decalcified bone express AnxA8 at low levels as did osteoclasts plated on native or denatured type I collagen. Finally, AnxA8‐regulated cytoskeletal reorganization in osteoclasts generated on a mineralized matrix. Thus, we used a novel approach to define a distinct bone‐dependent genetic program associated with terminal osteoclast differentiation and identified Anxa8 as a gene strongly induced late in osteoclast differentiation and a protein that regulates formation of the cells characteristic actin ring. J. Cell. Physiol. 226: 3413–3421, 2011.


Bone | 2014

A method for isolating high quality RNA from mouse cortical and cancellous bone

Natalie H. Kelly; John C. Schimenti; F. Patrick Ross; Marjolein C. H. van der Meulen

The high incidence of fragility fractures in cortico-cancellous bone locations, plus the fact that individual skeletal sites exhibit different responsiveness to load and disease, emphasizes the need to document separately gene expression in cortical and cancellous bone. A further confounding factor is marrow contamination since its high cellularity may effect gene expression measurements. We isolated RNA from cortical and cancellous bone of intact mouse tibiae, and also after marrow removal by flushing or centrifugation. RNA isolated from cancellous bone by each method was sufficient for gene expression analysis. Centrifugation removed contaminating cells more efficiently than flushing, as indexed by histology and decreased expression of Icam4, a highly expressed erythroid gene. In contrast, centrifuged cortical bone had 12- and 13- fold higher expression of the bone-related genes Col1a1 and Bglap, while levels in marrow-free cancellous bone were 30- and 31-fold higher when compared to bone where marrow was left intact. Furthermore, cortical bone had higher expression of Col1a1 and Bglap than cancellous bone. Thus, RNA isolated by this novel approach can reveal site-specific changes in gene expression in cortical and cancellous bone sites.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2015

Intermittent PTH administration and mechanical loading are anabolic for periprosthetic cancellous bone

Matthew J. Grosso; Hayden-William Courtland; Xu Yang; James P. Sutherland; Kirsten Stoner; Joseph Nguyen; Anna Fahlgren; F. Patrick Ross; Marjolein C. H. van der Meulen; Mathias Bostrom

The purpose of this study was to determine the individual and combined effects on periprosthetic cancellous bone of intermittent parathyroid hormone administration (iPTH) and mechanical loading at the cellular, molecular, and tissue levels. Porous titanium implants were inserted bilaterally on the cancellous bone of adult rabbits beneath a loading device attached to the distal lateral femur. The left femur received a sham loading device. The right femur was loaded daily, and half of the rabbits received daily PTH. Periprosthetic bone was evaluated up to 28 days for gene expression, histology, and µCT analysis. Loading and iPTH increased bone mass by a combination of two mechanisms: (1) Altering cell populations in a pro‐osteoblastic/anti‐adipocytic direction, and (2) controlling bone turnover by modulating the RANKL‐OPG ratio. At the tissue level, BV/TV increased with both loading (+53%, p < 0.05) and iPTH (+54%, p < 0.05). Combined treatment showed only small additional effects at the cellular and molecular levels that corresponded to a small additive effect on bone volume (+13% compared to iPTH alone, p > 0.05). This study suggests that iPTH and loading are potential therapies for enhancing periprosthetic bone formation. The elucidation of the cellular and molecular response may help further enhance the combined therapy and related targeted treatment strategies.

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Mathias Bostrom

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Alberto Carli

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Natalie H. Kelly

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Samrath Bhimani

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Steven R. Goldring

Hospital for Special Surgery

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Xu Yang

Hospital for Special Surgery

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