Issue 13, 2023

Investigating bone resorption in Atlantic herring fish intermuscular bones with solid-state NMR

Abstract

Bones are connective tissues mainly made of collagen proteins with calcium phosphate deposits. They undergo constant remodeling, including destroying existing bones tissues (known as bone resorption) and rebuilding new ones. Bone remodeling has been well-described in mammals, but it is not the case in fish. Here, we focused on the mobile phase of the bone vascular system by carefully preserving moisture in adult Atlantic herring intermuscular bones. We detected pore water with high ionic strength and soluble degraded peptides whose 1H-transverse relaxation times, T2s, exceed 15 milliseconds. With favorable T2s, we incorporated a solution state spinlock scheme into the INEPT techniques to unequivocally demonstrate collagen degradation. In addition, we detected a substantial amount of inorganic phosphate in solution with 31P-NMR in the considerable background of solid hydroxyapatite calcium phosphate by saturation recovery experiment. It is consistent with the idea that bone resorption degrades bone collagen and releases calcium ions and phosphate ions in the pore water with increased ionic strength. Our report is the first to probe the resorption process in the heterogenous bone microstructure with a rigorous characterization of 1H and 13C relaxation behavior and direct assignments. In addition, we contribute to the fish bones literature by investigating fish bone remodeling using NMR for the first time.

Graphical abstract: Investigating bone resorption in Atlantic herring fish intermuscular bones with solid-state NMR

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 Jul 2022
Accepted
19 Feb 2023
First published
06 Mar 2023

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023,25, 9336-9348

Investigating bone resorption in Atlantic herring fish intermuscular bones with solid-state NMR

H. Wang, S. Falcoz, J. Morales and J. Berteau, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2023, 25, 9336 DOI: 10.1039/D2CP03023C

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