Peverali F A, Basdra E K, Papavassiliou A G
Istituto di Genetica Biochimica ed Evoluzionistica, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Pavia, Italy.
Mol Med. 2001 Jan;7(1):68-78.
It is widely accepted that mechanical loading is necessary to construct the architecture of bone and to maintain bone mass. However, the molecular mechanisms whereby bone cells respond to mechanical stimuli remain elusive. The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling cascades are known to play a crucial role in the immediate osteoblast response to a variety of bone-active agents. An important component of this response occurs at the transcriptional level and is executed by downstream phosphorylation substrates, most notably, a number of signal-responsive transcription factors. To identify whether the MAPKs are involved in the mechanotransduction process and to determine the effect on down-stream transcription factors, we stimulated human periodontal ligament (hPDL) osteoblast-like cells by mechanical stretching by employing an established in vitro model of continuous stretch application.
Whole-cell extracts were prepared from cultivated hPDL cells that were exposed to short-term, continuous mechanical stretch. In-gel kinase assays were used to assess their kinase activity towards the immediate-early gene products c-Jun and c-Fos [constituents of the activator protein-1 (AP-1) transcription factor]. Electrophoretic mobility-shift and southwestern experiments utilizing a DNA sequence that contained a previously undefined atypical AP-1-binding site in the promoter of the human liver/bone/kidney alkaline phosphatase (L/B/K ALP) gene (an early marker for osteoblastic differentiation) were employed to evaluate their specific binding capacity.
Selective members of the MAPK family were rapidly induced by stretching, as manifested by their ability to enhance phosphorylation of their cognate substrates c-Jun and, to a lesser extent, c-Fos in the in-gel kinase assay. This induction was accompanied by markedly increased, phospho-c-Jun-containing AP-1-binding activity, as determined by the binding analyses performed with the relevant sequence from the L/B/K ALP promoter.
In as much as AP-1 is instrumental in regulating genes activated at the onset of osteoblast differentiation, such as the ALP gene, we pose that an interplay of distinct MAPKs targeting AP-1 components may dictate the osteogenic response of hPDL cells to mechanical stimulation.
机械负荷对于构建骨结构和维持骨量是必需的,这一点已被广泛接受。然而,骨细胞对机械刺激作出反应的分子机制仍不清楚。已知丝裂原活化蛋白激酶(MAPK)信号级联在成骨细胞对多种骨活性因子的即时反应中起关键作用。这种反应的一个重要组成部分发生在转录水平,由下游磷酸化底物执行,最显著的是一些信号响应转录因子。为了确定MAPKs是否参与机械转导过程,并确定其对下游转录因子的影响,我们采用已建立的连续拉伸应用体外模型,通过机械拉伸刺激人牙周膜(hPDL)成骨样细胞。
从暴露于短期、连续机械拉伸的培养hPDL细胞中制备全细胞提取物。凝胶内激酶分析用于评估它们对即早基因产物c-Jun和c-Fos[活化蛋白-1(AP-1)转录因子的组成成分]的激酶活性。利用人肝/骨/肾碱性磷酸酶(L/B/K ALP)基因(成骨细胞分化的早期标志物)启动子中包含一个先前未定义的非典型AP-1结合位点的DNA序列进行电泳迁移率变动和西南实验,以评估它们的特异性结合能力。
MAPK家族的选择性成员通过拉伸迅速被诱导,这在凝胶内激酶分析中表现为它们增强其同源底物c-Jun磷酸化的能力,以及在较小程度上增强c-Fos磷酸化的能力。通过用来自L/B/K ALP启动子的相关序列进行的结合分析确定,这种诱导伴随着含磷酸化c-Jun的AP-1结合活性的显著增加。
由于AP-1在调节成骨细胞分化开始时激活的基因(如ALP基因)中起作用,我们认为靶向AP-1成分的不同MAPKs之间的相互作用可能决定hPDL细胞对机械刺激的成骨反应。