Vol. 121, No. 1 (Supplement) 2016
Supplement abstract

Effects of recombinant Irisin on the musculoskeletal system of hind-limb suspended mice

Published 2017-10-06

Keywords

  • Osteoporosis,
  • sarcopenia,
  • mechanical loading

How to Cite

Colaianni, G., Mongelli, T., Cuscito, C., Lippo, L., Pignataro, P., Brunetti, G., Mori, G., Passeri, G., Colucci, S., Cinti, S., & Grano, M. (2017). Effects of recombinant Irisin on the musculoskeletal system of hind-limb suspended mice. Italian Journal of Anatomy and Embryology, 121(1), 81. Retrieved from https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/ijae/article/view/2219

Abstract

We previously showed that Irisin, a myokine released from skeletal muscle after physical exercise, plays a central role in the control of bone mass, driving positive effects on cortical mineral density and geometry in vivo (1). Here we demonstrated that r-Irisin treatment prevents bone loss in hind-limb suspended mice when administered during suspension and recovers bone mass when mice were injected after a suspension period (4 weeks) during which they developed bone loss. Micro computed tomography of femurs showed that r-Irisin treatment positively affected both cortical and trabecular bone. As expected, unloaded mice treated with vehicle displayed a remarkable decrease of cortical and trabecular bone mineral density (BMD), whereas in Irisin-treated unloaded mice no loss of BMD was observed with respect to control mice kept under normal loading. Likewise, by treating mice after they already developed disuse-induced bone loss, r-Irisin was able to restore the damaged mineral component. Furthermore, trabecular bone volume fraction (BV/TV), which dramatically decreased in unloaded mice, was prevented by r-Irisin therapy. In particular, r-Irisin treatment preserved the number of trabeculae (Tb.N) and the fractal dimension, an index of optimal micro-architectural complexity of trabecular bone.We also showed that r-Irisin treatment protects muscle mass suffering from atrophy during unloading. Thus, unloaded mice treated with vehicle displayed a severe loss of muscle mass, as confirmed by ~ 60% decline of vastus lateralis weight and ~33% decrease of fiber cross-sectional area. Conversely, Irisin-treated unloaded mice showed no loss of muscle weight and similar fiber cross-sectional area to control mice. Our data reveal for the first time that r-Irisin treatment prevents and retrieves disuse-induced bone loss and muscle atrophy. These findings may lead to develop an Irisin-based therapy for the prevention and treatment of osteoporosis and sarcopenia in all patients who cannot perform physical activity, as occurs during aging and immobility, and it could also represent a countermeasure for astronauts exposed to microgravity during space flight missions.This work was supported in part by ERISTO grant (to M.G.), by MIUR grant ex60% (to M.G.) and by SIOMMMS grant (to G.C.).