This application addresses the Challenge Area (15) """"""""Translational Science"""""""" and the Challenge Topic 15- OD(ORDR)-101 """"""""Pilot Projects for Prevention, Early Detection and Treatment of Rare Diseases"""""""". Hereditary Multiple Exostosis Syndrome (HME) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder that affects about 1 in 50,000 children and adolescents. HME is characterized by cartilage-capped tumors that grow adjacent to the growth plates of skeletal elements and protrude into, and impinge onto, surrounding tissues and organs. The exostoses can thus cause growth retardation, compression of nerves and tendons, skeletal deformities and early onset osteoarthritis, and become malignant in about 5% of patients. Current therapies are palliative, and patients struggle with pain, limited mobility and fatigue and undergo multiple surgeries throughout their lives. This situation is particularly frustrating because the genes responsible for over 70% of HME cases have been known for several years. The genes are EXT1 and EXT2 that encode Golgi-associated glycosyltransferases responsible for heparan sulfate (HS) synthesis. The patients are heterozygous for EXT1 or EXT2 loss-of-function mutations and their cells produce lower HS amounts. HS chains regulate key physiologic processes and do so by various mechanisms and most notably by restricting the topographical distribution of signaling factors within tissues, but it is not known whether defects in such signal-restriction mechanisms subtend HME. In Preliminary Studies using mouse mutants expressing low HS-PGs (perlecan and syndecans), we found that a key growth plate signaling factor -Indian hedgehog- was widely and abnormally distributed within growth plate and adjacent perichondrium, and this was followed by exostosis formation. In additional Preliminary Studies, we created Ext mutant mice that develop exostoses in long bones and ribs and that are the first genuine model of human HME. Using these novel findings and innovative animal models, we propose to identify and test mechanisms of HME pathogenesis. Our central hypothesis is that deficiency in HS production causes leakage of chondrogenic factors (most notably Indian hedgehog) from upper growth plate zones into adjacent perichondrium, altering the developmental program of perichondrium-associated progenitor cells and inciting ectopic chondrogenesis and exostosis formation (Aim 1). We will then test whether exostosis formation can be prevented by pharmacologic interference with hedgehog signaling and associated transcriptional chondrogenic switches (Aim 2). This Challenge Grant will jump-start mechanistic research on HME pathogenesis by exploiting our novel mouse models of this neglected, painful and debilitating human disorder, will identify molecular targets of intervention, and will test a specific therapeutic strategy to prevent exostosis formation. The number of HME patients is small, but the community of their families is large. This project will thus provide a renewed sense of hope to patients and families alike that this neglected disease will actively be studied and a cure may one day be found. Hereditary Multiple Exostosis Syndrome (HME) is a serious disease that affects about 1 in 50,000 children and adolescents, causes growth retardation, continuous pain, limited mobility and fatigue, and are associated with bone malignant tumors. There are no cures or effective treatments at the moment, and this project thus aims to identify the mechanisms of pathogenesis and test a specific therapeutic treatment to prevent formation of tumor-like bone (exostosis) typical of this disease.

Public Health Relevance

Hereditary Multiple Exostosis Syndrome (HME) is a serious disease that affects about 1 in 50,000 children and adolescents, causes growth retardation, continuous pain, limited mobility and fatigue, and is associated with bone malignant tumors. There are no cures or effective treatments at the moment, and this project thus aims to identify the mechanisms of pathogenesis and test a specific therapeutic treatment to prevent formation of tumor-like bone (exostosis) typical of this disease.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS)
Type
NIH Challenge Grants and Partnerships Program (RC1)
Project #
7RC1AR058382-03
Application #
8234479
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-MOSS-C (58))
Program Officer
Tyree, Bernadette
Project Start
2009-09-21
Project End
2012-08-31
Budget Start
2011-04-01
Budget End
2012-08-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$348,421
Indirect Cost
Name
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Department
Type
DUNS #
073757627
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19104
Sgariglia, Federica; Pedrini, Elena; Bradfield, Jonathan P et al. (2015) The type 2 diabetes associated rs7903146 T allele within TCF7L2 is significantly under-represented in Hereditary Multiple Exostoses: insights into pathogenesis. Bone 72:123-7
Cantley, Leslie; Saunders, Cheri; Guttenberg, Marta et al. (2013) Loss of ?-catenin induces multifocal periosteal chondroma-like masses in mice. Am J Pathol 182:917-27
Huegel, Julianne; Mundy, Christina; Sgariglia, Federica et al. (2013) Perichondrium phenotype and border function are regulated by Ext1 and heparan sulfate in developing long bones: a mechanism likely deranged in Hereditary Multiple Exostoses. Dev Biol 377:100-12
Sgariglia, Federica; Candela, Maria Elena; Huegel, Julianne et al. (2013) Epiphyseal abnormalities, trabecular bone loss and articular chondrocyte hypertrophy develop in the long bones of postnatal Ext1-deficient mice. Bone 57:220-31
Huegel, Julianne; Sgariglia, Federica; Enomoto-Iwamoto, Motomi et al. (2013) Heparan sulfate in skeletal development, growth, and pathology: the case of hereditary multiple exostoses. Dev Dyn 242:1021-32
Mundy, Christina; Yasuda, Tadashi; Kinumatsu, Takashi et al. (2011) Synovial joint formation requires local Ext1 expression and heparan sulfate production in developing mouse embryo limbs and spine. Dev Biol 351:70-81
Zak, Beverly M; Schuksz, Manuela; Koyama, Eiki et al. (2011) Compound heterozygous loss of Ext1 and Ext2 is sufficient for formation of multiple exostoses in mouse ribs and long bones. Bone 48:979-87