Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Jun 2024)

Galunisertib downregulates mutant type I collagen expression and promotes MSCs osteogenesis in pediatric osteogenesis imperfecta

  • Arantza Infante,
  • Natividad Alcorta-Sevillano,
  • Iratxe Macías,
  • Leire Cabodevilla,
  • Dalia Medhat,
  • Brittany Lafaver,
  • Tara K. Crawford,
  • Charlotte L. Phillips,
  • Ana M. Bueno,
  • Belén Sagastizabal,
  • Maitane Arroyo,
  • Ainara Campino,
  • Daniela Gerovska,
  • Marcos Araúzo-Bravo,
  • Blanca Gener,
  • Clara I. Rodríguez

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 175
p. 116725

Abstract

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Qualitative alterations in type I collagen due to pathogenic variants in the COL1A1 or COL1A2 genes, result in moderate and severe Osteogenesis Imperfecta (OI), a rare disease characterized by bone fragility. The TGF-β signaling pathway is overactive in OI patients and certain OI mouse models, and inhibition of TGF-β through anti-TGF-β monoclonal antibody therapy in phase I clinical trials in OI adults is rendering encouraging results. However, the impact of TGF-β inhibition on osteogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells from OI patients (OI-MSCs) is unknown. The following study demonstrates that pediatric skeletal OI-MSCs have imbalanced osteogenesis favoring the osteogenic commitment. Galunisertib, a small molecule inhibitor (SMI) that targets the TGF-β receptor I (TβRI), favored the final osteogenic maturation of OI-MSCs. Mechanistically, galunisertib downregulated type I collagen expression in OI-MSCs, with greater impact on mutant type I collagen, and concomitantly, modulated the expression of unfolded protein response (UPR) and autophagy markers. In vivo, galunisertib improved trabecular bone parameters only in female oim/oim mice. These results further suggest that type I collagen is a tunable target within the bone ECM that deserves investigation and that the SMI, galunisertib, is a promising new candidate for the anti-TGF-β targeting for the treatment of OI.

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