Bone homeostasis, which involves formation and resorption, is an important process for maintaining adequate bone mass in humans. Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune disease characterized by inflammation and bone loss, leading to joint destruction and deformity, and is a representative disease of disrupted bone homeostasis. The bone loss and joint destruction are mediated by immunological insults by proinflammatory cytokines and various immune cells. The connection between bone and immunity has been intensely studied and comprises the emerging field of osteoimmunology. Osteoimmunology is an interdisciplinary science investigating the interplay between the skeletal and the immune systems. The main contributors in osteoimmunology are the bone effector cells, such as osteoclasts or osteoblasts, and the immune cells, particularly lymphocytes and monocytes. Physiologically, osteoclasts originate from immune cells, and immune cells regulate osteoblasts and vice versa. Pathological conditions such as RA might affect these interactions, thereby altering bone homeostasis, resulting in the unfavorable outcome of bone destruction. In this review, we describe the osteoclastogenic roles of the proinflammatory cytokines and immune cells that are important in the pathophysiology of RA.
Our knowledge of the embryonic development of the lymphatic vessels within the kidney is limited. The aim of this study was to establish the time of appearance and the distribution of intra-renal lymphatic vessels in the developing mouse kidney by using the lymphatic marker, LYVE-1. Kidneys from embryonic day 12 (E12) to E18, from neonates at post-natal day 1 (P1) to P21, and from adults were studied. In the adult mouse kidney, LYVE-1 was expressed mainly in the lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) and in a subset of endothelial cells in the glomerular capillaries. However, in the developing mouse kidney, LYVE-1 was also expressed transiently in F4/80(+)/CD11b(-) immature macrophages/dendritic cells and in the developing renal vein. LYVE-1(+) lymphatic vessels connected with extra-renal lymphatics were detected in the kidney at E13. F4/80(+)/CD11b(-)/LYVE-1(+) immature macrophages/dendritic cells appeared prior to the appearance of LYVE-1(+) renal lymphatic vessels and were closely intermingled or even formed part of the lymphatic vascular wall. Prox1 was expressed only in the LYVE-1(+) LECs from fetus to adult-hood, but not in LYVE-1(+) endothelial cells of the developing renal vein and macrophages/dendritic cells. Thus, lymphatic vessels of the kidney might originate by extension of extra-renal lymphatics through an active branching process possibly associated with F4/80(+)/CD11b(-)/LYVE-1(+) macrophages/dendritic cells.
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