Vitamin D and FGF23 play a major role in calcium/phosphate balance. Vitamin D may control bone resorption but the potential role of FGF23 has never been evaluated. The objective of this study was therefore to compare the effects of vitamin D and FGF23 on osteoclast differentiation and activity in human monocyte-derived osteoclasts. Human monocytes, purified from blood of healthy donors, were incubated with M-CSF and RANKL to obtain mature multinucleated osteoclasts (MNC). Experiments were carried out to assess the effects of FGF23 as compared to native vitamin D (25-D) and active vitamin D (1,25-D) on osteoclast differentiation and on bone-resorbing osteoclast activity. Additional experiments with the pan fibroblast growth factor receptor inhibitor (FGFR-i) were performed. Phosphorylation Akt and Erk pathways were analyzed by Western blot analyses. Both 1,25-D and FGF23, to a lesser extent, significantly inhibited osteoclastogenesis at early stages; when adding FGFR-i, osteoclast formation was restored. Biochemical experiments showed an activation of the Akt and Erk pathways under FGF23 treatment. In contrast, in terms of activity, 1,25-D had no effect on resorption, whereas FGF23 slightly but significantly increased bone resorption; 25-D had no effects on either differentiation or on activity. These data show that 1,25-D inhibits osteoclastogenesis without regulating osteoclast-mediated bone resorption activity; FGF23 has biphasic effects on osteoclast physiology, inhibiting osteoclast formation while stimulating slightly osteoclast activity. These results may be of importance and taken into account in chronic kidney disease when therapies modulating FGF23 are available.
We found that the GFR was significantly impaired in two of our seven patients with PH3 diagnosed during childhood. This finding is in contrast to the early-impaired renal function in PH1 and PH2 and appears to refute to preliminary reassuring data on renal function in PH3.
Our study reports on the efficacy of IA in the recurrence of FSGS after KTx in children. Further prospective controlled studies are required to confirm these results and to optimize the management of FSGS recurrence after paediatric KTx.
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