Department of Translational Dental Medicine, Boston University Henry M. Goldman School of Dental Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
Endocrine Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
FASEB J. 2021 May;35(5):e21578. doi: 10.1096/fj.202100059R.
Bone loss is a major health concern for astronauts during long-term spaceflight and for patients during prolonged bed rest or paralysis. Growing evidence suggests that osteocytes, the most abundant cells in the mineralized bone matrix, play a key role in sensing mechanical forces applied to the skeleton and integrating the orchestrated response into subcellular biochemical signals to modulate bone homeostasis. However, the precise molecular mechanisms underlying both mechanosensation and mechanotransduction in late-osteoblast-to-osteocyte cells under microgravity (µG) have yet to be elucidated. To unravel the mechanisms by which late osteoblasts and osteocytes sense and respond to mechanical unloading, we exposed the osteocytic cell line, Ocy454, to 2, 4, or 6 days of µG on the SpaceX Dragon-6 resupply mission to the International Space Station. Our results showed that µG impairs the differentiation of osteocytes, consistent with prior osteoblast spaceflight experiments, which resulted in the downregulation of key osteocytic genes. Importantly, we demonstrate the modulation of critical glycolysis pathways in osteocytes subjected to microgravity and discovered a set of mechanical sensitive genes that are consistently regulated in multiple cell types exposed to microgravity suggesting a common, yet to be fully elucidated, genome-wide response to microgravity. Ground-based simulated microgravity experiments utilizing the NASA rotating-wall-vessel were unable to adequately replicate the changes in microgravity exposure highlighting the importance of spaceflight missions to understand the unique environmental stress that microgravity presents to diverse cell types. In summary, our findings demonstrate that osteocytes respond to µG with an increase in glucose metabolism and oxygen consumption.
骨丢失是宇航员在长期太空飞行期间和患者在长时间卧床或瘫痪期间的主要健康问题。越来越多的证据表明,成骨细胞是矿化骨基质中最丰富的细胞,在感知施加在骨骼上的机械力和将协调的反应整合到亚细胞生化信号中以调节骨稳态方面发挥着关键作用。然而,微重力下(µG)晚期成骨细胞向成骨细胞细胞中机械感觉和机械转导的确切分子机制尚未阐明。为了解开晚期成骨细胞和破骨细胞感知和响应机械卸载的机制,我们将成骨细胞系 Ocy454 暴露于 SpaceX Dragon-6 对国际空间站的补给任务中的 2、4 或 6 天µG 下。我们的结果表明,µG 会损害破骨细胞的分化,这与之前的成骨细胞太空飞行实验结果一致,后者导致关键破骨细胞基因下调。重要的是,我们证明了在微重力下骨细胞中关键糖酵解途径的调节,并发现了一组在多个暴露于微重力的细胞类型中一致调节的机械敏感基因,这表明对微重力存在共同但尚未完全阐明的全基因组反应。利用 NASA 旋转壁容器进行的地面模拟微重力实验无法充分复制微重力暴露的变化,这突出了太空飞行任务对于理解微重力对多种细胞类型带来的独特环境压力的重要性。总之,我们的研究结果表明,破骨细胞对µG 的反应是葡萄糖代谢和耗氧量增加。