School of Mechanical, Medical and Process Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, 4000, Australia.
Centre for Biomedical Technologies, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, 4000, Australia.
Mol Med. 2022 Sep 4;28(1):102. doi: 10.1186/s10020-022-00530-4.
It is well-known that both macrophages and osteocytes are critical regulators of osteogenesis and osteoclastogenesis, yet there is limited understanding of the macrophage-osteocyte interaction, and how their crosstalk could affect bone homeostasis and mineralization. This research therefore aims to investigate the effects of macrophage polarization on osteocyte maturation and mineralization process.
A macrophage-derived conditioned medium based osteocyte culture was set up to investigate the impact of macrophages on osteocyte maturation and terminal mineralization. Surgically induced osteoarthritis (OA) rat model was used to further investigate the macrophage-osteocyte interaction in inflammatory bone remodeling, as well as the involvement of the Notch signaling pathway in the mineralization process.
Our results identified that osteocytes were confined in an immature stage after the M1 macrophage stimulation, showing a more rounded morphology, higher expression of early osteocyte marker E11, and significantly lower expression of mature osteocyte marker DMP1. Immature osteocytes were also found in inflammatory bone remodeling areas, showing altered morphology and mineralized structures similar to those observed under the stimulation of M1 macrophages in vitro, suggesting that M1 macrophages negatively affect osteocyte maturation, leading to abnormal mineralization. The Notch signaling pathway was found to be down regulated in M1 macrophage-stimulated osteocytes as well as osteocytes in inflammatory bone. Overexpression of the Notch signaling pathway in osteocytes showed a significant circumvention on the negative effects from M1 macrophage.
Taken together, our findings provide valuable insights into the mechanisms involved in abnormal bone mineralization under inflammatory conditions.
众所周知,巨噬细胞和骨细胞都是成骨和破骨细胞的关键调节因子,但对于巨噬细胞-骨细胞相互作用以及它们的串扰如何影响骨稳态和矿化过程的了解有限。因此,本研究旨在探讨巨噬细胞极化对骨细胞成熟和矿化过程的影响。
建立了基于巨噬细胞衍生条件培养基的骨细胞培养体系,以研究巨噬细胞对骨细胞成熟和终末矿化的影响。采用手术诱导的骨关节炎(OA)大鼠模型,进一步研究炎症性骨重塑过程中的巨噬细胞-骨细胞相互作用,以及 Notch 信号通路在矿化过程中的参与。
我们的结果表明,M1 巨噬细胞刺激后,骨细胞被局限在未成熟阶段,表现出更圆的形态,早期骨细胞标志物 E11 的表达更高,而成熟骨细胞标志物 DMP1 的表达明显更低。在炎症性骨重塑区域也发现了未成熟的骨细胞,其形态和矿化结构与体外 M1 巨噬细胞刺激下观察到的相似,表明 M1 巨噬细胞负调控骨细胞成熟,导致异常矿化。在 M1 巨噬细胞刺激的骨细胞和炎症性骨中的骨细胞中,Notch 信号通路被下调。骨细胞中 Notch 信号通路的过表达显著减轻了 M1 巨噬细胞的负面影响。
综上所述,我们的研究结果为炎症条件下异常骨矿化的机制提供了有价值的见解。