We examine clonal murine calvarial MC3T3-E1 cells to determine if they exhibit a developmental sequence similar to osteoblasts in bone tissue, namely, proliferation of undifferentiated osteoblast precursors followed by postmitotic expression of differentiated osteoblast phenotype. During the initial phase of developmental (days 1-9 of culture), MC3T3-E1 cells actively replicate, as evidenced by the high rates of DNA synthesis and progressive increase in cell number, but maintain a fusiform appearance, fail to express alkaline phosphatase, and do not accumulate mineralized extracellular collagenous matrix, consistent with immature osteoblasts. By day 9 the cultures display cuboidal morphology, attain confluence, and undergo growth arrest. Downregulation of replication is associated with expression of osteoblast functions, including production of alkaline phosphatase, processing of procollagens to collagens, and incremental deposition of a collagenous extracellular matrix. Mineralization of extracellular matrix, which begins approximately 16 days after culture, marks the final phase of osteoblast phenotypic development. Expression of alkaline phosphatase and mineralization is time but not density dependent. Type I collagen synthesis and collagen accumulation are uncoupled in the developing osteoblast. Although collagen synthesis and message expression peaks at day 3 in immature cells, extracellular matrix accumulation is minimal. Instead, matrix accumulates maximally after 7 days of culture as collagen biosynthesis is diminishing. Thus, extracellular matrix formation is a function of mature osteoblasts. Ascorbate and beta-glycerol phosphate are both essential for the expression of osteoblast phenotype as assessed by alkaline phosphatase and mineralization of extracellular matrix. Ascorbate does not stimulate type I collagen gene expression in MC3T3-E1 cells, but it is absolutely required for deposition of collagen in the extracellular matrix. Ascorbate also induces alkaline phosphatase activity in mature cells but not in immature cells. beta-glycerol phosphate displays synergistic actions with ascorbate to further stimulate collagen accumulation and alkaline phosphatase activity in postmitotic, differentiated osteoblast-like cells. Mineralization of mature cultures requires the presence of beta-glycerol phosphate. Thus, MC3T3-E1 cells display a time-dependent and sequential expression of osteoblast characteristics analogous to in vivo bone formation. The developmental sequence associated with MC3T3-E1 differentiation should provide a useful model to study the signals that mediate the switch between proliferation and differentiation in bone cells, as well as provide a renewable culture system to examine the molecular mechanism of osteoblast maturation and the formation of bone-like extracellular matrix.
To examine the most effective route (intravenous vs. "pulse" oral), dose (physiologic vs. pharmacologic) and long-term efficacy of calcitriol therapy for secondary hyperparathyroidism in patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), we randomized 19 hemodialysis patients with severe hyperparathyroidism to receive over a 36-week study period either pulse orally administered calcitriol and intravenous placebo (pulse oral group; N = 9) or intravenous calcitriol and oral placebo (intravenous group; N = 10). Calcitriol was given intermittently in a double-blinded fashion at an initial dose of 2 micrograms thrice weekly and increased as tolerated up to a maximum dose of 4 micrograms per treatment. All patients received similar daily calcium supplementation (2.5 g of elemental calcium) and low dialysate calcium (1.25 mmol/liter) throughout the study period. At the maximum tolerated calcitriol dose, serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D levels were significantly greater 60 minutes following intravenous (389 pmol/liter) compared to oral administration (128 pmol/liter). In spite of the different pharmacologic profiles, intravenous and oral administered calcitriol resulted in similar reductions of serum PTH over the 36 week period of observation (P = 0.300), achieving an overall maximum average PTH reduction of 43% (P = 0.016). Long-term intensive calcitriol therapy (independent of administration route), however, failed to decrease parathyroid gland size as assessed by high resolution ultrasound and/or magnetic resonance imaging. Calcitriol therapy also failed to alter the calcium sensitivity as assessed by serial PTH measurements in response to calcium loading. Increases in serum calcium, but not calcitriol dose or parathyroid gland size, predicted decrements in serum PTH, whereas hyperphosphatemia and the level of PTH suppression derived from the PTH/ionized calcium response curves predicted refractoriness to calcitriol therapy. Episodes of hypercalcemia and hyperphosphatemia were similar in both treatment groups and limited the dose of calcitriol that could be administered. These data indicate that intermittent intensive calcitriol therapy, regardless of administration route, is poorly tolerated, fails to correct parathyroid gland size and functional abnormalities, and has a limited ability to achieve sustained serum PTH reductions in end-stage renal failure patients with severe hyperparathyroidism.
To determine the relative importance of parathyroid gland enlargement and alterations in calcium sensing (set-point changes) in the pathogenesis of uremic secondary hyperparathyroidism (2 degrees HPT), we investigated the relationship between estimates of parathyroid gland size and calcium-mediated parathyroid hormone (PTH) suppression in 19 normocalcemic 2 degrees HPT patients on chronic maintenance hemodialysis. We compared our results to calcium-mediated PTH suppression in 12 normal volunteers, 12 patients with familial benign hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (FBHH), a disorder of abnormal calcium sensing, and 9 subjects with primary hyperparathyroidism (1 degree HPT), which is characterized by both calcium set-point abnormalities and parathyroid gland enlargement. We found that the 2 degrees HPT group displayed a distinctive pattern of calcium-mediated PTH suppression characterized by a failure to normally suppress PTH at supraphysiologic ionized calcium concentrations, similar to 1 degree HPT, but without the rightward shift of the calcium-PTH suppression curve that characterizes calcium sensing abnormalities in FBHH and 1 degree HPT. In the patients with 2 degrees HPT, hypercalcemic suppression resulted in an ending PTH (as a percent of baseline) that was significantly higher (39.8 +/- 4.47%), and a slope of the calcium-PTH suppression curve that was significantly less negative (-4.8 +/- 0.53), compared to respective values of 19.4 +/- 1.81% (P = 0.0009) and -9.0 +/- 1.02 (P = 0.001) in normals and 19.1 +/- 2.49% (P = 0.001) and -9.6 +/- 1.11 (P = 0.0006) in FBHH. Values of ending PTH and slope in 2 degrees HPT patients, however, were similar to those found in 1 degree HPT (49.8 +/- 6.35%, P = 0.21 and -4.5 +/- 0.74, P = 0.72). The ionized calcium concentration required to attain half maximal PTH suppression (EC50) in 2 degrees HPT (1.20 +/- 0.02 mmol/liter) was not significantly different from normals (1.25 +/- 0.01 mmol/liter, P = 0.12) but was significantly less than in 1 degree HPT (1.52 +/- 0.02 mmol/liter, P < 0.0001) and in FBHH (1.44 +/- 0.02 mmol/liter, P < 0.0001). More importantly, we found a significant linear correlation between the natural logarithm of gland size and ending PTH suppression (r = 0.71, P < 0.001) and slope of the calcium-PTH curve (r = 0.67, P = 0.002) in 2 degrees HPT. Thus, calcium non-suppressible PTH secretion in 2 degrees HPT does not represent a simple set-point error, but rather correlates with the degree of parathyroid gland enlargement.
MC3T3-E1 cells in culture exhibit a temporal sequence of development similar to in vivo bone formation. To examine whether the developmental expression of the osteoblast phenotype depends on serum derived factors, we compared the time-dependent expression of alkaline phosphatase (ALP)-a marker of osteoblastic maturation- in MC3T3-E1 cells grown in the presence of fetal bovine serum (FBS) or resin/charcoal-stripped (AXC) serum. ALP was assessed by measuring enzyme activity, immunoblotting, and Northern analysis. Growth of MC3T3-E1 cells in FBS resulted in the programmed upregulation of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) post-proliferatively during osteoblast differentiation. In the presence of complete serum, actively proliferating cells during the initial culture period expressed low ALP levels consistent with their designation as pre-osteoblasts, whereas postmitotic cultures upregulated ALP protein, message, and enzyme activity. In addition, undifferentiated early cultures of MC3T3-E1 cells were refractory to forskolin (FSK) stimulation of ALP, but became forskolin responsive following prolonged culture in FBS containing media. In contrast, MC3T3-E1 cells grown in AXC serum displayed limited growth and failed to show a time-dependent increase in alkaline phosphatase. Neither the addition of IGF-I to AXC serum to augment cell number or plating at high density restored the time-dependent upregulation of alkaline phosphatase. Cells incubated in AXC serum for 14 days, however, though expressing low alkaline phosphatase levels, maintained the capacity to upregulate ALP after FBS re-addition or forskolin activation of cAMP-dependent pathways. Such time-dependent acquisition of FSK responsiveness and serum stimulation of ALP expression only in mature osteoblasts indicate the possible presence of differentiation switches that impart competency for a subset of osteoblast developmental events that require complete serum for maximal expression.
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