Development of the craniofacial skeleton requires interactions between progenitor cells and the collagen-rich extracellular matrix (ECM). The mediators of these interactions are not well-defined. Mutations in the discoidin domain receptor 2 gene (DDR2), which encodes a non-integrin collagen receptor, are associated with human craniofacial abnormalities, such as midface hypoplasia and open fontanels. However, the exact role of this gene in craniofacial morphogenesis is not known. As will be shown, Ddr2-deficient mice exhibit defects in craniofacial bones including impaired calvarial growth and frontal suture formation, cranial base hypoplasia due to aberrant chondrogenesis and delayed ossification at growth plate synchondroses. These defects were associated with abnormal collagen fibril organization, chondrocyte proliferation and polarization. As established by localization and lineage-tracing studies, Ddr2 is expressed in progenitor cell-enriched craniofacial regions including sutures and synchondrosis resting zone cartilage, overlapping with GLI1 + cells, and contributing to chondrogenic and osteogenic lineages during skull growth. Tissue-specific knockouts further established the requirement for Ddr2 in GLI +skeletal progenitors and chondrocytes. These studies establish a cellular basis for regulation of craniofacial morphogenesis by this understudied collagen receptor and suggest that DDR2 is necessary for proper collagen organization, chondrocyte proliferation, and orientation.
Keywords: cell biology; cranial suture; craniofacial growth; developmental biology; extracellular matrix; mouse; synchondrosis.
We each have unique facial features that are key to our identities. These features are inherited, but the mechanisms are poorly understood. People with the genetic disease spondylo-meta-epiphyseal dysplasia, or SMED, have characteristic facial and skull abnormalities including a flattened face and shortened skull. SMED is associated with mutations that inactivate the gene encoding a protein called discoidin domain receptor 2 (DDR2), which is a receptor for collagen. Collagen is the major structural protein in the human body, supporting the structure of cells and tissues. It also controls cell behaviors including growth, migration and differentiation, and it helps form tissues such as cartilage or bone. At least some of the effects of collagen on cells depend on its interaction with DDR2. Since the facial and skull abnormalities in mice with mutations that stop DDR2 from working correctly resemble those of SMED patients, these mice can be used to understand the cellular basis for this disease, as well as the role of DDR2 in the embryonic development of the face and skull. Therefore, Mohamed et al. set out to understand how loss of DDR2 causes the characteristic facial and skull defects associated with SMED. Mohamed et al. used mice that had been genetically modified so that DDR2 could be inactivated in skeletal progenitor cells, cartilage cells and bone cells (osteoblasts). Examining these mice, they found that the shortened skulls and flat face characteristic of mice lacking DDR2 are due to bones at the skull base failing to elongate correctly due to defects in the growth centers that depend on cartilage. Mohamed et al. also discovered that the cells that normally produce DDR2 are the progenitors of cartilage and bone-forming cells, which partly explains why lacking this protein leads to issues in growth of these tissues. In addition to shedding light on the causes of SMED, Mohamed et al.’s results also provide general insights into the mechanisms controlling the formation of facial and skull bones that depend on interactions between cells and collagen. This information may help explain how other abnormalities in the face and skull emerge, and provide a basis for how the shape of the skull has changed during human evolution. In the future, it may be possible to manipulate the activity of DDR2 to correct skull defects.
© 2023, Mohamed, Ge, Hallett et al.