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Featured researches published by Laura Lu.


Stem Cell Research & Therapy | 2016

Aging, inflammation, stem cells, and bone healing

Emmanuel Gibon; Laura Lu; Stuart B. Goodman

Complex interactions among cells of the monocyte-macrophage-osteoclast lineage and the mesenchymal stem cell-osteoblast lineage play a major role in the pathophysiology of bone healing. Whereas the former lineage directs inflammatory events and bone resorption, the latter represents a source of cells for bone regeneration and immune modulation. Both of these lineages are affected by increasing age, which is associated with higher baseline levels of inflammatory mediators, and a significant reduction in osteogenic capabilities. Given the above, fracture healing, osteoporosis, and other related events in the elderly present numerous challenges, which potentially could be aided by new therapeutic approaches to modulate both inflammation and bone regeneration.


Advances in Protein Chemistry | 2017

NF-κB as a Therapeutic Target in Inflammatory-Associated Bone Diseases

Tzu-Hua Lin; Jukka Pajarinen; Laura Lu; Akira Nabeshima; Luis A. Córdova; Zhenyu Yao; Stuart B. Goodman

Inflammation is a defensive mechanism for pathogen clearance and maintaining tissue homeostasis. In the skeletal system, inflammation is closely associated with many bone disorders including fractures, nonunions, periprosthetic osteolysis (bone loss around orthopedic implants), and osteoporosis. Acute inflammation is a critical step for proper bone-healing and bone-remodeling processes. On the other hand, chronic inflammation with excessive proinflammatory cytokines disrupts the balance of skeletal homeostasis involving osteoblastic (bone formation) and osteoclastic (bone resorption) activities. NF-κB is a transcriptional factor that regulates the inflammatory response and bone-remodeling processes in both bone-forming and bone-resorption cells. In vitro and in vivo evidences suggest that NF-κB is an important potential therapeutic target for inflammation-associated bone disorders by modulating inflammation and bone-remodeling process simultaneously. The challenges of NF-κB-targeting therapy in bone disorders include: (1) the complexity of canonical and noncanonical NF-κB pathways; (2) the fundamental roles of NF-κB-mediated signaling for bone regeneration at earlier phases of tissue damage and acute inflammation; and (3) the potential toxic effects on nontargeted cells such as lymphocytes. Recent developments of novel inhibitors with differential approaches to modulate NF-κB activity, and the controlled release (local) or bone-targeting drug delivery (systemic) strategies, have largely increased the translational application of NF-κB therapy in bone disorders. Taken together, temporal modulation of NF-κB pathways with the combination of recent advanced bone-targeting drug delivery techniques is a highly translational strategy to reestablish homeostasis in the skeletal system.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2017

Pro-inflammatory M1 macrophages promote osteogenesis by mesenchymal stem cells via the COX-2-prostaglandin E2 pathway†

Laura Lu; Florence Loi; Karthik Nathan; Tzu-Hua Lin; Jukka Pajarinen; Emmanuel Gibon; Akira Nabeshima; Luis A. Córdova; Eemeli Jämsen; Zhenyu Yao; Stuart B. Goodman

Bone fractures are among the most common orthopaedic problems that affect individuals of all ages. Immediately after injury, activated macrophages dynamically contribute to and regulate an acute inflammatory response that involves other cells at the injury site, including mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). These macrophages and MSCs work in concert to modulate bone healing. In this study, we co‐cultured undifferentiated M0, pro‐inflammatory M1, and anti‐inflammatory M2 macrophages with primary murine MSCs in vitro to determine the cross‐talk between polarized macrophages and MSCs and their effects on osteogenesis. After 4 weeks of co‐culture, MSCs grown with macrophages, especially M1 macrophages, had enhanced bone mineralization compared to MSCs grown alone. The level of bone formation after 4 weeks of culture was closely associated with prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) secretion early in osteogenesis. Treatment with celecoxib, a cyclooxygenase‐2 (COX‐2) selective inhibitor, significantly reduced bone mineralization in all co‐cultures but most dramatically in the M1‐MSC co‐culture. We also found that the presence of macrophages reduced the secretion of osteoprotegerin (OPG), the decoy RANKL receptor, suggesting that macrophages may indirectly modulate osteoclast activity in addition to enhancing bone formation. Taken together, these findings suggest that an initial pro‐inflammatory phase modulated by M1 macrophages promotes osteogenesis in MSCs via the COX‐2‐PGE2 pathway. Understanding the complex interactions between macrophages and MSCs provide opportunities to optimize bone healing and other regenerative processes via modulation of the inflammatory response. This study provides one possible biological mechanism for the adverse effects of non‐steroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs on fracture healing and bone regeneration.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2017

Mesenchymal stem cells in the aseptic loosening of total joint replacements

Jukka Pajarinen; Tzu-Hua Lin; Akira Nabeshima; Eemeli Jämsen; Laura Lu; Karthik Nathan; Zhenyu Yao; Stuart B. Goodman

Peri-prosthetic osteolysis remains as the main long-term complication of total joint replacement surgery. Research over four decades has established implant wear as the main culprit for chronic inflammation in the peri-implant tissues and macrophages as the key cells mediating the host reaction to implant-derived wear particles. Wear debris activated macrophages secrete inflammatory mediators that stimulate bone resorbing osteoclasts; thus bone loss in the peri-implant tissues is increased. However, the balance of bone turnover is not only dictated by osteoclast-mediated bone resorption but also by the formation of new bone by osteoblasts; under physiological conditions these two processes are tightly coupled. Increasing interest has been placed on the effects of wear debris on the cells of the bone-forming lineage. These cells are derived primarily from multipotent mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) residing in bone marrow and the walls of the microvasculature. Accumulating evidence indicates that wear debris significantly impairs MSC-to-osteoblast differentiation and subsequent bone formation. In this review, we summarize the current understanding of the effects of biomaterial implant wear debris on MSCs. Emerging treatment options to improve initial implant integration and treat developing osteolytic lesions by utilizing or targeting MSCs are also discussed.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2017

Decreased osteogenesis in mesenchymal stem cells derived from the aged mouse is associated with enhanced NF-κB activity

Tzu-Hua Lin; Emmanuel Gibon; Florence Loi; Jukka Pajarinen; Luis A. Córdova; Akira Nabeshima; Laura Lu; Zhenyu Yao; Stuart B. Goodman

Aging is associated with significant bone loss and delayed fracture healing. NF‐κB activation is highly correlated with inflammatory‐associated bone diseases including infection, wear particle exposure, and chronic inflammation during natural aging processes. The critical roles of NF‐κB in both the pro‐inflammatory response and osteoclast‐mediated bone resorption have been well defined. However, the biological effects of NF‐κB activation in mesenchymal stem cell (MSC)‐mediated bone formation remain largely unknown. In the current study, bone marrow‐MSCs were isolated from young (8 weeks old) and aged (72 weeks old) mice. NF‐κB activity in MSCs at basal levels and under different biological conditions were determined by our recently established lentiviral vector‐based luciferase reporter assay. We found that NF‐κB activity was increased in aged MSCs at basal levels or when exposed to low dose (10 or 100 ng/ml) lipopolysaccharide (LPS); this effect was not seen when the cells were exposed to higher dose (1 μg/ml) LPS. During osteogenesis, NF‐κB activity was increased in aged MSCs at weeks 1 and 2, but showed no significant difference at week 3. Both Smurf2 and TAZ, the NF‐κB target genes that regulate osteogenic differentiation, were increased in aged MSCs. In addition, the expression of RANKL was dramatically increased, and OPG was decreased in aged MSCs. Our findings suggest that targeting NF‐κB activity in MSCs has the potential to modulate aging‐associated bone loss, or enhance bone‐healing in aged patients.


Biomaterials | 2018

Mesenchymal stem cell-macrophage crosstalk and bone healing

Jukka Pajarinen; Tzu-Hua Lin; Emmanuel Gibon; Yusuke Kohno; Masahiro Maruyama; Karthik Nathan; Laura Lu; Zhenyu Yao; Stuart B. Goodman

Recent research has brought about a clear understanding that successful fracture healing is based on carefully coordinated cross-talk between inflammatory and bone forming cells. In particular, the key role that macrophages play in the recruitment and regulation of the differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) during bone regeneration has been brought to focus. Indeed, animal studies have comprehensively demonstrated that fractures do not heal without the direct involvement of macrophages. Yet the exact mechanisms by which macrophages contribute to bone regeneration remain to be elucidated. Macrophage-derived paracrine signaling molecules such as Oncostatin M, Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), and Bone Morphogenetic Protein-2 (BMP2) have been shown to play critical roles; however the relative importance of inflammatory (M1) and tissue regenerative (M2) macrophages in guiding MSC differentiation along the osteogenic pathway remains poorly understood. In this review, we summarize the current understanding of the interaction of macrophages and MSCs during bone regeneration, with the emphasis on the role of macrophages in regulating bone formation. The potential implications of aging to this cellular cross-talk are reviewed. Emerging treatment options to improve facture healing by utilizing or targeting MSC-macrophage crosstalk are also discussed.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2017

The biological response to orthopedic implants for joint replacement. II: Polyethylene, ceramics, PMMA, and the foreign body reaction

Emmanuel Gibon; Luis A. Córdova; Laura Lu; Tzu-Hua Lin; Zhenyu Yao; Moussa Hamadouche; Stuart B. Goodman

Novel evidence-based prosthetic designs and biomaterials facilitate the performance of highly successful joint replacement (JR) procedures. To achieve this goal, constructs must be durable, biomechanically sound, and avoid adverse local tissue reactions. Different biomaterials such as metals and their alloys, polymers, ceramics, and composites are currently used for JR implants. This review focuses on (1) the biological response to the different biomaterials used for TJR and (2) the chronic inflammatory and foreign-body response induced by byproducts of these biomaterials. A homeostatic state of bone and surrounding soft tissue with current biomaterials for JR can be achieved with mechanically stable, infection free and intact (as opposed to the release of particulate or ionic byproducts) implants. Adverse local tissue reactions (an acute/chronic inflammatory reaction, periprosthetic osteolysis, loosening and subsequent mechanical failure) may evolve when the latter conditions are not met. This article (Part 2 of 2) summarizes the biological response to the non-metallic materials commonly used for joint replacement including polyethylene, ceramics, and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA), as well as the foreign body reaction to byproducts of these materials.


Biomaterials | 2017

Mutant CCL2 protein coating mitigates wear particle-induced bone loss in a murine continuous polyethylene infusion model

Akira Nabeshima; Jukka Pajarinen; Tzu-Hua Lin; Xinyi Jiang; Emmanuel Gibon; Luis A. Córdova; Florence Loi; Laura Lu; Eemeli Jämsen; Kensuke Egashira; Fan Yang; Zhenyu Yao; Stuart B. Goodman

Wear particle-induced osteolysis limits the long-term survivorship of total joint replacement (TJR). Monocyte/macrophages are the key cells of this adverse reaction. Monocyte Chemoattractant Protein-1 (MCP-1/CCL2) is the most important chemokine regulating trafficking of monocyte/macrophages in particle-induced inflammation. 7ND recombinant protein is a mutant of CCL2 that inhibits CCL2 signaling. We have recently developed a layer-by-layer (LBL) coating platform on implant surfaces that can release biologically active 7ND. In this study, we investigated the effect of 7ND on wear particle-induced bone loss using the murine continuous polyethylene (PE) particle infusion model with 7ND coating of a titanium rod as a local drug delivery device. PE particles were infused into hollow titanium rods with or without 7ND coating implanted in the distal femur for 4 weeks. Specific groups were also injected with RAW 264.7 as the reporter macrophages. Wear particle-induced bone loss and the effects of 7ND were evaluated by microCT, immunohistochemical staining, and bioluminescence imaging. Local delivery of 7ND using the LBL coating decreased systemic macrophage recruitment, the number of osteoclasts and wear particle-induced bone loss. The development of a novel orthopaedic implant coating with anti-CCL2 protein may be a promising strategy to mitigate peri-prosthetic osteolysis.


Journal of orthopaedic translation | 2017

Inflammation, ageing, and bone regeneration

Emmanuel Gibon; Laura Lu; Karthik Nathan; Stuart B. Goodman

Summary Bone healing involves complex biological pathways and interactions among various cell types and microenvironments. Among them, the monocyte–macrophage–osteoclast lineage and the mesenchymal stem cell–osteoblast lineage are critical, in addition to an initial inflammatory microenvironment. These cellular interactions induce the necessary inflammatory milieu and provide the cells for bone regeneration and immune modulation. Increasing age is accompanied with a rise in the basal state of inflammation, potentially impairing osteogenesis. The translational potential of this article: Translational research has shown multiple interactions between inflammation, ageing, and bone regeneration. This review presents recent, relevant considerations regarding the effects of inflammation and ageing on bone healing.


Stem Cell Research & Therapy | 2017

Preconditioning of murine mesenchymal stem cells synergistically enhanced immunomodulation and osteogenesis

Tzu-Hua Lin; Jukka Pajarinen; Akira Nabeshima; Laura Lu; Karthik Nathan; Eemeli Jämsen; Zhenyu Yao; Stuart B. Goodman

BackgroundMesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are capable of immunomodulation and tissue regeneration, highlighting their potential translational application for treating inflammatory bone disorders. MSC-mediated immunomodulation is regulated by proinflammatory cytokines and pathogen-associated molecular patterns such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Previous studies showed that MSCs exposed to interferon gamma (IFN-γ) and the proinflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) synergistically suppressed T-cell activation.MethodsIn the current study, we developed a novel preconditioning strategy for MSCs using LPS plus TNF-α to optimize the immunomodulating ability of MSCs on macrophage polarization.ResultsPreconditioned MSCs enhanced anti-inflammatory M2 macrophage marker expression (Arginase 1 and CD206) and decreased inflammatory M1 macrophage marker (TNF-α/IL-1Ra) expression using an in-vitro coculture model. Immunomodulation of MSCs on macrophages was significantly increased compared to the combination of IFN-γ plus TNF-α or single treatment controls. Increased osteogenic differentiation including alkaline phosphate activity and matrix mineralization was only observed in the LPS plus TNF-α preconditioned MSCs. Mechanistic studies showed that increased prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) production was associated with enhanced Arginase 1 expression. Selective cyclooxygenase-2 inhibition by Celecoxib decreased PGE2 production and Arginase 1 expression in cocultured macrophages.ConclusionsThe novel preconditioned MSCs have increased immunomodulation and bone regeneration potential and could be applied to the treatment of inflammatory bone disorders including periprosthetic osteolysis, fracture healing/nonunions, and osteonecrosis.

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