It has been widely believed that the cytokines required for osteoclast formation are M-CSF (also known as CSF-1) and RANKL. Recently, a novel cytokine, designated IL-34, has been identified as another ligand of CSF1R. This study was to explore the biological function, specifically osteoclastogenesis and bone metabolism, of the new cytokine. We produced recombinant mouse IL-34 and found that together with RANKL it induces the formation of osteoclasts both from splenocytes as well as dose-dependently from bone marrow cells in mouse and these cells also revealed bone resorption activity. It also promotes osteoclast differentiation from human peripheral blood mononucleated cells. Finally, we show that systemic administration of IL-34 to mice increases the proportion of CD11b+ cells and reduces trabecular bone mass. Our data indicate that IL-34 is another important player in osteoclastogenesis and thus may have a role in bone diseases. Strategies of targeting CSF1/CSF1R have been developed and some of them are already in preclinical and clinical studies for treatment of inflammatory diseases. Our results strongly suggest the need to revisit these strategies as they may provide a new potential pharmaceutical target for the regulation of bone metabolism in addition to their role in the treatment of inflammatory diseases.
Rab7 has been shown to regulate the late steps of the endocytic pathway. In bone-resorbing osteoclasts, it is involved in formation of the ruffled border, which is a late endosomal-like compartment in the plasma membrane. Here we report a new Rab7-interacting protein, Rac1, another small GTPase protein that binds to the GTPform of Rab7 as found with a two-hybrid system. We demonstrate further that Rab7 colocalizes with Rac1 at the fusion zone of the ruffled border in bone-resorbing osteoclasts. In other cell types, such as fibroblast-like cells, partial colocalization is perinuclear. Because Rac1 is known to control the actin cytoskeleton through its effectors, the Rab7-Rac1 interaction may mediate late endosomal transport between microtubules and microfilaments enabling endosomal vesicles to switch tracks and may thus also regulate ruffled border formation in osteoclasts.Skeletal modeling during growth and bone remodeling in the adult skeleton are dependent on bone resorption. Osteoclasts are the cells that are responsible for the degradation of the organic and inorganic bone matrix. These multinucleated cells mature from a monocyte/ macrophage lineage of precursor cells and are mainly located in the vicinity of the bone surface in bone marrow (1). When bone resorption is induced, osteoclasts migrate to the site of the resorption, become highly polarized (2), and form four distinct membrane domains: the ruffled border, sealing zone, functional secretory domain, and basolateral domain (2-4). During the process of osteoclast activation, the cells attach to the bone matrix through a ring-like structure called a sealing zone. The membrane-facing bone matrix inside the sealing zone is the ruffled border formed via rapid fusion of intracellular acidic vesicles to the plasma membrane (5, 6). This results in acidification and release of proteinases into the space between the bone matrix and the ruffled border known as the resorption lacuna. As a result, bone matrix is digested (7). The mineral is dissolved by acid and collagen matrix degraded by proteinases, the degradation products are internalized locally, and transcytosed to the functional secretary domain at the top of the polarized osteoclasts for secretion (8, 9). Thus, the ruffled border, which is assembled by fusion with endosomal membranes, shows not only characteristics of the plasma membrane but also those of the late endosomal/lysosomal membranes (5). Indeed, many proteins present at the ruffled border are also found in endosomal and/or lysosomal membranes, including Rab7, vacuolar H ϩ -ATPase, cathepsin K, and others.We have previously shown that the ruffled border is divided functionally into two subdomains, the fusion zone for secretion and the uptake zone for endocytosis of degraded products (10).Recent studies have shown that Ras-related small GTPases of the Rab family control the endocytic, secretory, and recycling traffic of intracellular vesicles in mammalian cells (11)(12)(13)(14). Approximately 60 Rab proteins have been identified in the human gen...
The role of the estrogen receptor α (ERα) in bone-forming cells is incompletely understood at present. To examine the in vivo effects of ERα in these cells, we generated a mouse strain in which the ERα gene is inactivated in osteoblasts via osteocalcin promoter-regulated cyclic recombinase (Cre) activity (ERα(ΔOB/ΔOB)). This enabled micro-computed tomography- and histomorphometry-based analysis of ERα-mediated effects in bone-forming cells in mice, in which the systemic ERα-mediated effects are intact. In female ERα(ΔOB/ΔOB) mice, trabecular and cortical bone volumes were significantly reduced (31.5 and 11.4%, respectively) at 3.5 mo of age compared with control ERα(fl/fl) animals, and their response to ovariectomy was small compared with that of controls. In contrast with females, no differences could be detected in the bone phenotype of young males, whereas in 6-mo-old ERα(ΔOB/ΔOB) males, trabecular bone volume (Tb.BV) was decreased (27.5%). The ERα inactivation-related effects were compared with those of controls having a similar genetic background. Parental osteocalcin-Cre mice did not show Cre-related changes. Our results suggest that in female mice, Tb.BV and cortical bone volume are critically dependent on the ERα regulation of osteoblasts, whereas in male mice, osteoblastic ERα is not required for the regulation of bone formation during rapid skeletal growth, but it is involved in the maintenance of Tb.BV.
Cellular proteins extracted from normal and cancer cells bind polymerizing ADP-ribose transferase (pADPRT) on nitrocellulose membrane transblots. Histones at 1 mg/ml concentration completely prevent the binding of pADPRT to cellular proteins, indicating that the binding of histones to pADPRT sites competitively blocks the association of pADPRT to proteins other than histones. The direct binding of pADPRT to histones is shown by cross-linking with glutaraldehyde. The COOH-terminal basic histone H1 tail binds to the basic polypeptide domain of pADPRT. The basic domain present in the NH2-terminal part of core histones is the probable common structural feature of all core histones that accounts for their binding to pADPRT. Two polypeptide domains of pADPRT were identified, by way of CNBr fragments, to bind histones. These two domains are located within the 64-kDa fragment of pADPRT and are contiguous with the polypeptide domains that were shown to participate in self-association of pADPRT, ending at the 606th amino acid residue. The polypeptide domains of pADPRT which participate in DNA binding are thus shown to associate also with other proteins. Intact pADPRT binds to both the zinc-free or zinc-reconstituted basic polypeptide fragments of pADPRT. Histones activate auto-poly(ADP)-ribosylation of pADPRT by increasing the number of short oligomers on pADPRT. This reaction is also dependent in a biphasic manner on the concentration of pADPRT. Histones in solution are only marginally poly(ADP)-ribosylated but are good polymer acceptors when incorporated into artificial nucleosome structures.
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