TY - JOUR
T1 - Spatial histomorphometry reveals that local peripheral nerves modulate but are not required for skeletal adaptation to applied load in mice
AU - Beeve, Alec T.
AU - Hassan, Mohamed G.
AU - Li, Anna
AU - Migotsky, Nicole
AU - Silva, Matthew J.
AU - Scheller, Erica L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s).
PY - 2025/3/1
Y1 - 2025/3/1
N2 - Mechanical loading is required for bone health and results in skeletal adaptation to optimize strength. Local nerve axons, particularly within the periosteum, may respond to load-induced biomechanical and biochemical cues. However, their role in the bone anabolic response remains controversial. We hypothesized that spatial alignment of periosteal nerves with sites of load-induced bone formation would clarify this relationship. To achieve this, we developed RadialQuant, a custom tool for spatial histomorphometry. Tibiae of control and neurectomized (sciatic/femoral nerve cut) pan-neuronal Baf53b-tdTomato reporter mice were loaded for 5 days. Bone formation and periosteal nerve axon density were then quantified simultaneously in non-decalcified sections of the mid-diaphysis using RadialQuant. In control animals, anabolic loading induced maximal periosteal bone formation at the site of peak compression, as has been reported previously. By contrast, loading did not significantly change overall periosteal nerve density. Neurectomy depleted ∼90% of all periosteal axons, with near-total depletion on load-responsive surfaces. Neurectomy alone also caused de novo bone formation on the lateral aspect of the mid-diaphysis. However, neurectomy did not inhibit load-induced increases in periosteal bone area, mineralizing surface, or bone formation rate. Rather, neurectomy spatially redistributed load-induced bone formation toward the lateral tibial surface with a reduction in periosteal bone formation at the posterolateral apex (-63%) and enhancement at the lateral surface (+1360%). Altogether, this contributed to comparable load-induced changes in cortical bone area fraction. Our results show that local skeletal innervation modulates but is not required for skeletal adaptation to applied load in our model. This supports the continued use of loading and weight-bearing exercise as an effective strategy to increase bone mass, even in settings of peripheral nerve damage or dysfunction.
AB - Mechanical loading is required for bone health and results in skeletal adaptation to optimize strength. Local nerve axons, particularly within the periosteum, may respond to load-induced biomechanical and biochemical cues. However, their role in the bone anabolic response remains controversial. We hypothesized that spatial alignment of periosteal nerves with sites of load-induced bone formation would clarify this relationship. To achieve this, we developed RadialQuant, a custom tool for spatial histomorphometry. Tibiae of control and neurectomized (sciatic/femoral nerve cut) pan-neuronal Baf53b-tdTomato reporter mice were loaded for 5 days. Bone formation and periosteal nerve axon density were then quantified simultaneously in non-decalcified sections of the mid-diaphysis using RadialQuant. In control animals, anabolic loading induced maximal periosteal bone formation at the site of peak compression, as has been reported previously. By contrast, loading did not significantly change overall periosteal nerve density. Neurectomy depleted ∼90% of all periosteal axons, with near-total depletion on load-responsive surfaces. Neurectomy alone also caused de novo bone formation on the lateral aspect of the mid-diaphysis. However, neurectomy did not inhibit load-induced increases in periosteal bone area, mineralizing surface, or bone formation rate. Rather, neurectomy spatially redistributed load-induced bone formation toward the lateral tibial surface with a reduction in periosteal bone formation at the posterolateral apex (-63%) and enhancement at the lateral surface (+1360%). Altogether, this contributed to comparable load-induced changes in cortical bone area fraction. Our results show that local skeletal innervation modulates but is not required for skeletal adaptation to applied load in our model. This supports the continued use of loading and weight-bearing exercise as an effective strategy to increase bone mass, even in settings of peripheral nerve damage or dysfunction.
KW - biomechanical loading
KW - biomechanics
KW - bone histomorphometry
KW - bone-brain-nervous system interactions
KW - interoception
KW - osteoblasts
KW - sensory nerve
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/86000642397
U2 - 10.1093/jbmrpl/ziaf006
DO - 10.1093/jbmrpl/ziaf006
M3 - Article
C2 - 40040837
AN - SCOPUS:86000642397
SN - 2473-4039
VL - 9
JO - JBMR Plus
JF - JBMR Plus
IS - 3
M1 - ziaf006
ER -