Receptor Activator of NF-κB (RANK) expressed on osteoclasts and their precursors is a receptor for RANK ligand (RANKL). Signals transduced by RANKL-RANK interaction induce genes essential for the ...differentiation and function of osteoclasts, partly through the direct binding of NFATc1, to target gene promoters. We have previously cloned a 6-kb fragment containing the 5′-flanking region of the mouse RANK gene and have demonstrated the presence of binding elements of hematological transcription factors, such as MITF, PU.1 and AP-1. Here, we demonstrated the presence of the functional NFATc1 responsive element on the RANK gene promoter. Transfection of an NFATc1-expression vector increased RANK mRNA that was subsequently nullified by NFATc1 knockdown. With the use of electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA), an oligonucleotide (−388/-353) showed specific protein-DNA binding that was blockshifted with an anti-NFATc1 antibody and washed out with excess amounts of the cold consensus sequence. Co-transfection studies with the use of an NFATc1-expression vector and RANK promoter-reporter constructs showed that NFATc1 increased promoter activity 2-fold in RAW264.7 cells that was again nullified as disclosed by mutagenesis studies. Taken together, these results indicate that RANK transcription is positively regulated by the RANKL signal through the direct binding of NFATc1 to its specific binding site of the RANK gene promoter, and suggest the presence of a crucial positive feedback mechanism of gene expression that promotes accelerated terminal differentiation of RANK-positive committed precursors to mature osteoclasts.
•The RANKL increased the genes characteristic for osteoclasts including receptor RANK.•Among putative NFATc1-binding sites located in RANK gene promoter, the proximal one (−370) shows specific NFATc1 binding through EMSA, and is functional as disclosed by mutagenesis studies.
Low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1 (LRP1), a multifunctional cell surface protein, is expressed in bone marrow-derived macrophages. While LRP1 is thought to be a suppressor of ...osteoclast differentiation at late stages, its function at early stages remains unclear. Here we demonstrate that Lrp1 stable knockdown by lentiviral short hairpin RNA in macrophage cell line RAW264 cells inhibited RANKL-induced osteoclast formation and osteoclastic master transcription factor Nfatc1 mRNA expression as assessed by quantitative RT-PCR. Furthermore, knockdown of the Lrp1 gene suppressed not only differentiation, but also proliferation, and inhibitory effects on osteoblastic ALP activity by osteoclast-derived humoral factors. Thus, we propose that LRP1 in macrophages is required for both differentiation into osteoclasts and osteoclast-osteoblast interactions.
•Knockdown of Lrp1 inhibits osteoclast differentiation in RAW264 cells.•Knockdown of Lrp1 suppresses cell proliferation in RAW264 cells.•Knockdown of Lrp1 suppresses osteoclast-osteoblast interactions in RAW264 cells.
Diabetic nephropathy is a major source of end-stage renal failure, affecting about one-third cases of diabetes mellitus. It has long been accepted that diabetic nephropathy is mainly characterized by ...glomerular defects, while clinical observations have implied that renal tubular damage is closely linked to kidney dysfunction at the early stages of diabetic nephropathy. In this study, we conducted pathohistological analyses focusing on renal tubular lesions in the early-stage diabetic kidney with the use of a streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes mellitus mouse model. The results revealed that histological alterations in renal tubules, shown by a vacuolar nucleic structure, accumulations of PAS-positive substance, and accelerated restoration stress, occur initially without the presence of glomerular lesions in the early-stage diabetic kidney, and that these tubular defects are localized mainly in proximal renal tubules. Moreover, enhanced expression of RAGE, suggesting an aberrant activation of AGEs-RAGE signaling pathway, and accumulation of oxidative modified mitochondria through the impaired autophagy/lysosome system, were also seen in the damaged diabetic proximal renal tubules. Our findings indicate that proximal tubular defects are the initial pathological events increasingly linked to the progression of diabetic nephropathy, and that controlling renal tubular damage could be an effective therapeutic strategy for the clinical treatment of diabetic nephropathy.
Pericytes are pluripotent cells that enclose the endothelium of small blood vessels in the whole body. These cells are thought to play a limited role in vascular development and blood pressure ...regulation; however, current evidence from numerous studies suggests several significant biologic aspects of pericytes in animals. One viewpoint is that pericytes are also known as potential cellular origin of multiple soft tissue tumors. Experimental evidence of the cellular origin of pericytic tumors is still insufficient, however, and their molecular pathogenesis is poorly understood. Here, we used a conditional constitutively active Smoothened allele (Rosa-SmoM2) and Cre recombinase mice to activate hedgehog (Hh) signaling, exclusively in the monocyte/macrophage and osteoclast lineage (LysMcre) or in RANK expressing cells (RANKcre) that are recognized as osteoclast precursor cells. Mice conditionally expressing SmoM2 with LysMcre displayed no significant skeletal phenotype; surprisingly, however, RANKcre; Rosa-SmoM2 mice frequently developed progressive soft tissue tumors in regions of the leg. Genetic lineage tracing analysis uncovered a new domain of RANKcre-expressing cells in the skeletal muscle interstitial cells that display markers consistent with vascular pericytes. Neoplasms arising from these cells showed increased expression of Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) that are molecular indicators of malignancy. Moreover, the tumors displayed strong bone invasive potency associated with osteoclastic bone resorption. Thus, these findings provide a novel insight into tumor pathology: Hh signal activated-pericytes can be a potential cellular origin of multiple soft tissue tumors.
The functional role of the Hedgehog (Hh)-signaling pathway has been widely investigated in bone physiology/development. Previous studies have, however, focused primarily on
functions in bone ...formation, while its roles in bone resorption have not been fully elucidated. Here, we found that cyclopamine (smoothened (Smo) inhibitor), GANT-58 (GLI1 inhibitor), or GANT-61 (GLI1/2 inhibitor) significantly inhibited RANKL-induced osteoclast differentiation of bone marrow-derived macrophages. Although the inhibitory effects were exerted by cyclopamine or GANT-61 treatment during 0-48 h (early stage of osteoclast differentiation) or 48-96 h (late stage of osteoclast differentiation) after RANKL stimulation, GANT-58 suppressed osteoclast formation only during the early stage. These results suggest that the Smo-GLI1/2 axis mediates the whole process of osteoclastogenesis and that GLI1 activation is requisite only during early cellular events of osteoclastogenesis. Additionally, macrophage/osteoclast-specific deletion of Smo in mice was found to attenuate the aging phenotype characterized by trabecular low bone mass, suggesting that blockage of the Hh-signaling pathway in the osteoclast lineage plays a protective role against age-related bone loss. Our findings reveal a specific role of the Hh-signaling pathway in bone resorption and highlight that its inhibitors show potential as therapeutic agents that block osteoclast formation in the treatment of senile osteoporosis.
The longitudinal growth of long bone, regulated by an epiphyseal cartilaginous component known as the "growth plate", is generated by epiphyseal chondrocytes. The growth plate provides a continuous ...supply of chondrocytes for endochondral ossification, a sequential bone replacement of cartilaginous tissue, and any failure in this process causes a wide range of skeletal disorders. Therefore, the cellular and molecular characteristics of the growth plate are of interest to many researchers. Hedgehog (Hh), well known as a mitogen and morphogen during development, is one of the best known regulatory signals in the developmental regulation of the growth plate. Numerous animal studies have revealed that signaling through the Hh pathway plays multiple roles in regulating the proliferation, differentiation, and maintenance of growth plate chondrocytes throughout the skeletal growth period. Furthermore, over the past few years, a growing body of evidence has emerged demonstrating that a limited number of growth plate chondrocytes transdifferentiate directly into the full osteogenic and multiple mesenchymal lineages during postnatal bone development and reside in the bone marrow until late adulthood. Current studies with the genetic fate mapping approach have shown that the commitment of growth plate chondrocytes into the skeletal lineage occurs under the influence of epiphyseal chondrocyte-derived Hh signals during endochondral bone formation. Here, we discuss the valuable observations on the role of the Hh signaling pathway in the growth plate based on mouse genetic studies, with some emphasis on recent advances.
The long bone midshaft expands by forming primary osteons at the periosteal surface of cortical bone in humans and rodents. Osteoblastic bone formation in the vascular cavity in the center of primary ...osteons is delayed during cortical bone development. The mechanisms of the formation of primary osteons is not fully understood, however. Focusing on NOTCH1 signaling, an inhibitory signaling on osteoblastic bone formation, our immunohistochemical analysis revealed Delta like1 (DLL1), a ligand of NOTCH1, and the NOTCH1 intracellular domain (NICD, an activated form of NOTCH1) immunoreactivity, in the cuboidal osteoblasts lining the bone surface in the vascular cavity of primary osteons during postnatal growth in rats. Interestingly, five days after treatment of primary osteoblasts with ascorbic acid and β glycerophosphate, protein levels of both DLL1 and NICD increased transiently, indicating that DLL1 activates NOTCH1 in primary cultured osteoblasts. Thus, the results imply that DLL1-NOTCH1 signaling in osteoblasts is associated with primary osteonal bone formation.
•Cuboidal osteoblasts do not express JAG1 in femur cortical bone.•Cuboidal osteoblasts express DLL1 and NICD in femur cortical bone.•Primary cultured calvarial osteoblasts express DLL1 and NICD.
Receptor activator of NF-κB (RANK) expressed on osteoclasts and their precursors is a receptor for RANK ligand (RANKL). Signals transduced by RANKL-RANK interaction induce genes essential for the ...differentiation and function of osteoclasts. We have cloned a basic promoter region of the mouse RANK gene and have analyzed the transcription machinery by transcription factors such as PU.1 (−480), and MITF (−100). Here, we examined the regulatory mechanisms of RANK gene transcription through AP-1 binding site, agagctca (−240). RANK mRNA expression in pre-osteoclastic RAW264.7 cells was induced by Phorbol12-myristate13-acetate (PMA) and suppressed by protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor calphostin C. In RAW264.7 cells, Fos knockdown by siRNA blocked the inducible effect of PMA on RANK expression. By EMSA, an oligonucleotide (−246/-238) showed DNA protein binding, the specificity of which was confirmed by block-shift assay with an anti-Fos antibody and by the addition of the excess of a cold consensus probe. Co-transfection with a Fos expression vector showed that Fos increased RANK promoter activity 6-fold in RAW264.7 cells, and the addition of PU.1 and MITF superinduced the activity more than twenty-fold by the addition of PU.1 and MITF. Mutagenesis of the putative AP-1 site (−240) blocked the inducible effect of Fos on promoter activity. Taken together, these results indicate that during the differentiation of bone marrow mono-nucleated cells into osteoclast precursors, RANK transcription is positively regulated by Fos/AP-1 through the binding element of its gene promoter, supporting the concept that Fos activation by continuous CSF-1 stimulation on macrophages triggers initial expression of RANK and, later, a positive feedback loop by RANKL-RANK interaction.
•RANK gene promoter contained the functional AP1-binding site, and activation of c-kinase increased direct binding of Fos to the RANK gene promoter.
In rodents, the long bone diaphysis is expanded by forming primary osteons at the periosteal surface of the cortical bone. This ossification process is thought to be regulated by the microenvironment ...in the periosteum. Type VI collagen (Col VI), a component of the extracellular matrix (ECM) in the periosteum, is involved in osteoblast differentiation at early stages. In several cell types, Col VI interacts with NG2 on the cytoplasmic membrane to promote cell proliferation, spreading and motility. However, the detailed functions of Col VI and NG2 in the ossification process in the periosteum are still under investigation. In this study, to clarify the relationship between localization of Col VI and formation of the primary osteon, we examined the distribution of Col VI and osteoblast lineages expressing NG2 in the periosteum of rat femoral diaphysis during postnatal growing periods by immunohistochemistry. Primary osteons enclosing the osteonal cavity were clearly identified in the cortical bone from 2 weeks old. The size of the osteonal cavities decreased from the outer to the inner region of the cortical bone. In addition, the osteonal cavities of newly formed primary osteons at the outermost region started to decrease in size after rats reached the age of 4 weeks. Immunohistochemistry revealed concentrated localization of Col VI in the ECM in the osteonal cavity. Col VI‐immunoreactive areas were reduced and they disappeared as the osteonal cavities became smaller from the outer to the inner region. In the osteonal cavities of the outer cortical regions, Runx2‐immunoreactive spindle‐shaped cells and mature osteoblasts were detected in Col VI‐immunoreactive areas. The numbers of Runx2‐immunoreactive cells were significantly higher in the osteonal cavities than in the osteogenic layers from 2 to 4 weeks. Most of these Runx2‐immunoreactive cells showed NG2‐immunoreactivity. Furthermore, PCNA‐immunoreactivity was detected in the Runx2‐immunoreactive spindle cells in the osteonal cavities. These results indicate that Col VI provides a characteristic microenvironment in the osteonal cavity of the primary osteon, and that differentiation and proliferation of the osteoblast lineage occur in the Col VI‐immunoreactive area. Interaction of Col VI and NG2 may be involved in the structural organization of the primary osteon by regulating osteoblast lineages.