Elsevier

Bone

Volume 84, March 2016, Pages 15-24
Bone

Original Full Length Article
Multiscale alterations in bone matrix quality increased fragility in steroid induced osteoporosis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bone.2015.11.019Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • In steroid induced osteoporosis, the mineralized collagen fibrils exhibit lower stiffness and a more random orientation distribution.

  • Load induced reorientation at the fibrillar level is reduced in steroid induced osteoporosis compared to wild type.

  • Reduced and more heterogeneous mineralization at the microscale was accompanied by significant increases in porosity.

Abstract

A serious adverse clinical effect of glucocorticoid steroid treatment is secondary osteoporosis, enhancing fracture risk in bone. This rapid increase in bone fracture risk is largely independent of bone loss (quantity), and must therefore arise from degradation of the quality of the bone matrix at the micro- and nanoscale. However, we lack an understanding of both the specific alterations in bone quality n steroid-induced osteoporosis as well as the mechanistic effects of these changes. Here we demonstrate alterations in the nanostructural parameters of the mineralized fibrillar collagen matrix, which affect bone quality, and develop a model linking these to increased fracture risk in glucocorticoid induced osteoporosis. Using a mouse model with an N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU)-induced corticotrophin releasing hormone promoter mutation (Crh 120/+) that developed hypercorticosteronaemia and osteoporosis, we utilized in situ mechanical testing with small angle X-ray diffraction, synchrotron micro-computed tomography and quantitative backscattered electron imaging to link altered nano- and microscale deformation mechanisms in the bone matrix to abnormal macroscopic mechanics. We measure the deformation of the mineralized collagen fibrils, and the nano-mechanical parameters including effective fibril modulus and fibril to tissue strain ratio. A significant reduction (51%) of fibril modulus was found in Crh 120/+ mice. We also find a much larger fibril strain/tissue strain ratio in Crh 120/+ mice (~ 1.5) compared to the wild-type mice (~ 0.5), indicative of a lowered mechanical competence at the nanoscale. Synchrotron microCT show a disruption of intracortical architecture, possibly linked to osteocytic osteolysis. These findings provide a clear quantitative demonstration of how bone quality changes increase macroscopic fragility in secondary osteoporosis.

Keywords

Glucocorticoid induced osteoporosis
In situ micro mechanical testing
Synchrotron small angle X-ray scattering
Nanoscale deformation mechanisms
Multiscale imaging

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Present address: The Royal British Legion Centre For Blast Injury Studies, Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK.