Extracellular Adenosine Contributes to the Hydrogen Peroxide-Induced Calcification of Cultured Tendon Cells
Tomomi Sakuma, Chantida P. N. Mahasarakham, Xin Lin, Hiroyuki Yoshitake, Akira Nifuji, Masaki Noda, Yoichi Ezura

TL;DR
Hydrogen peroxide increases calcification in tendon cells, likely through extracellular adenosine and related metabolites.
Contribution
This study identifies extracellular adenosine as a novel contributor to hydrogen peroxide-induced calcification in tendon cells.
Findings
Hydrogen peroxide significantly enhances calcium deposition in osteogenic media over two weeks.
Exogenous adenosine and dipyridamole increase mineralization in tendon cell cultures.
Metabolomic analysis shows hydrogen peroxide boosts extracellular ATP and its metabolites.
Abstract
Background: Well-known risk factors for soft tissue heterotopic ossification (HO) include aging and mechanical stress, which may be linked to oxidative stress and downstream nucleotide metabolites. Thus, we investigated the involvement of extracellular ATP (ex-ATP) and its metabolites in the oxidative stress-induced mineralization of TT-D6 cells and primary mouse tendon cells. Methods: An osteogenic culture with the intermittent addition of hydrogen peroxide was monitored for two weeks using metabolomic and gene expression analyses. Results: Calcium deposition was significantly enhanced by 0.3 mM hydrogen peroxide in the osteogenic media after 2 weeks, with minimal calcification in its absence. Similar results were observed in a medium transfer experiment using 3-day-old hydrogen peroxide-treated conditioned medium, which led to an increased expression of osterix and alkaline…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeterotopic Ossification and Related Conditions · Tendon Structure and Treatment · Dermatological and Skeletal Disorders
