Systems Biology of Bone Laboratory, Department of Mouse and Zebrafish Genetics, The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cambridge CB10 1SA, United Kingdom.
Systems Biology of Bone Laboratory, Department of Mouse and Zebrafish Genetics, The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cambridge CB10 1SA, United Kingdom; Sanger Mouse Genetics Project, Department of Mouse and Zebrafish Genetics, The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cambridge CB10 1SA, United Kingdom.
Arch Biochem Biophys. 2014 Nov 1;561:130-6. doi: 10.1016/j.abb.2014.06.005. Epub 2014 Jun 17.
Bones are structures that give the shape and defined features to vertebrates, protect several soft organs and perform multiple endocrine influences on other organs. To achieve these functions bones are first modeled early during life and then constantly remodeled throughout life. The process of bone (re)modeling happens simultaneously at multitude of locations in the skeleton and ensures that vertebrates have a mechanically strong yet a flexible skeleton to the most part of their life. Given the extent of its occurrence in the body, bone remodeling is a highly energy demanding process and is co-ordinated with other physiological processes as diverse as energy metabolism, sleep-wake cycle and reproduction. Neuronal circuits in the brain play a very important role in the coordination of bone remodeling with other organ system functions, and perform this function in sync with environmental and peripheral hormonal cues. In this review, we will focus on the roles of hormonal signals and neural circuits that originate in, or impinge on, the brain in the regulation of bone mass. We will provide herein an updated view of how advances in molecular genetics have refined the neural circuits involved in the regulation of bone mass, from the whole brain level to the specific neuronal populations and their neurotransmitters. This will help to understand the mechanisms whereby vertebrate brain regulates bone mass by fine-tuning metabolic signals that originate in the brain or elsewhere in the body.
骨骼是赋予脊椎动物形状和特征的结构,保护着一些柔软的器官,并对其他器官发挥多种内分泌影响。为了实现这些功能,骨骼在生命早期首先被塑造,然后在整个生命过程中不断重塑。骨骼(重建)重塑的过程同时发生在骨骼的多个部位,确保脊椎动物在其大部分生命中拥有一个机械强度高但又灵活的骨骼。鉴于其在体内发生的程度,骨骼重塑是一个高度耗能的过程,并且与其他生理过程(如能量代谢、睡眠-觉醒周期和生殖)协调一致。大脑中的神经元回路在协调骨骼重塑与其他器官系统功能方面发挥着非常重要的作用,并与环境和外周激素信号同步发挥作用。在这篇综述中,我们将重点讨论源自大脑或影响大脑的激素信号和神经回路在调节骨量方面的作用。我们将提供最新的观点,说明分子遗传学的进展如何从大脑整体水平到特定神经元群体及其神经递质,细化了参与调节骨量的神经回路。这将有助于理解脊椎动物大脑通过微调源自大脑或身体其他部位的代谢信号来调节骨量的机制。