Spatz Jordan M, Wein Marc N, Gooi Jonathan H, Qu Yili, Garr Jenna L, Liu Shawn, Barry Kevin J, Uda Yuhei, Lai Forest, Dedic Christopher, Balcells-Camps Mercedes, Kronenberg Henry M, Babij Philip, Pajevic Paola Divieti
From the Endocrine Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, Harvard-MIT Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139.
From the Endocrine Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114.
J Biol Chem. 2015 Jul 3;290(27):16744-58. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M114.628313. Epub 2015 May 7.
Although bone responds to its mechanical environment, the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying the response of the skeleton to mechanical unloading are not completely understood. Osteocytes are the most abundant but least understood cells in bones and are thought to be responsible for sensing stresses and strains in bone. Sclerostin, a product of the SOST gene, is produced postnatally primarily by osteocytes and is a negative regulator of bone formation. Recent studies show that SOST is mechanically regulated at both the mRNA and protein levels. During prolonged bed rest and immobilization, circulating sclerostin increases both in humans and in animal models, and its increase is associated with a decrease in parathyroid hormone. To investigate whether SOST/sclerostin up-regulation in mechanical unloading is a cell-autonomous response or a hormonal response to decreased parathyroid hormone levels, we subjected osteocytes to an in vitro unloading environment achieved by the NASA rotating wall vessel system. To perform these studies, we generated a novel osteocytic cell line (Ocy454) that produces high levels of SOST/sclerostin at early time points and in the absence of differentiation factors. Importantly, these osteocytes recapitulated the in vivo response to mechanical unloading with increased expression of SOST (3.4 ± 1.9-fold, p < 0.001), sclerostin (4.7 ± 0.1-fold, p < 0.001), and the receptor activator of nuclear factor κΒ ligand (RANKL)/osteoprotegerin (OPG) (2.5 ± 0.7-fold, p < 0.001) ratio. These data demonstrate for the first time a cell-autonomous increase in SOST/sclerostin and RANKL/OPG ratio in the setting of unloading. Thus, targeted osteocyte therapies could hold promise as novel osteoporosis and disuse-induced bone loss treatments by directly modulating the mechanosensing cells in bone.
尽管骨骼会对其力学环境作出反应,但骨骼对机械卸载反应的细胞和分子机制尚未完全明确。骨细胞是骨骼中数量最多但了解最少的细胞,被认为负责感知骨骼中的应力和应变。硬化蛋白是SOST基因的产物,出生后主要由骨细胞产生,是骨形成的负调节因子。最近的研究表明,SOST在mRNA和蛋白质水平上均受到力学调节。在长期卧床休息和固定期间,人体和动物模型中的循环硬化蛋白都会增加,其增加与甲状旁腺激素的减少有关。为了研究机械卸载过程中SOST/硬化蛋白的上调是细胞自主反应还是对甲状旁腺激素水平降低的激素反应,我们将骨细胞置于由美国国家航空航天局旋转壁式容器系统实现的体外卸载环境中。为了进行这些研究,我们构建了一种新型骨细胞系(Ocy454),该细胞系在早期时间点且在没有分化因子的情况下会产生高水平的SOST/硬化蛋白。重要的是,这些骨细胞重现了体内对机械卸载的反应,SOST(3.4±1.9倍,p<0.001)、硬化蛋白(4.7±0.1倍,p<0.001)以及核因子κB受体激活剂配体(RANKL)/骨保护素(OPG)(2.5±0.7倍,p<0.001)的比值均增加。这些数据首次证明在卸载情况下SOST/硬化蛋白和RANKL/OPG比值存在细胞自主性增加。因此,通过直接调节骨骼中的机械传感细胞,靶向骨细胞疗法有望成为治疗骨质疏松症和废用性骨质流失的新型方法。