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result(s) for
"Bone Resorption - pathology"
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The contribution of serum cortisone and glucocorticoid metabolites to detrimental bone health in patients receiving hydrocortisone therapy
by
Rogers, Bairbre
,
Keevil, Brian G.
,
McKenna, Malachi J.
in
Adrenal insufficiency
,
Adrenal Insufficiency - drug therapy
,
Adrenal Insufficiency - pathology
2020
Background
Glucocorticoid therapy is the most common cause of iatrogenic osteoporosis. Less is known regarding the effect of glucocorticoids when used as replacement therapy on bone remodelling in patients with adrenal insufficiency. Enhanced intracellular conversion of inactive cortisone to active cortisol, by 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1(11β-HSD1) and other enzymes leading to alterations in glucocorticoid metabolism, may contribute to a deleterious effect on bone health in this patient group.
Methods
Study design: An open crossover prospective study randomizing ten hypopituitary men, with severe ACTH deficiency, to three commonly used hydrocortisone dose regimens.
Measurements: Following 6 weeks of each regimen, patients underwent 24-h serum cortisol/cortisone sampling, measurement of bone turnover markers, and a 24-h urine collection for measurement of urinary steroid metabolites by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Serum cortisone and cortisol were analysed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS).
Results
Dose-related and circadian variations in serum cortisone were seen to parallel those for cortisol, indicating conversion of ingested hydrocortisone to cortisone. The median area under the curve (AUC) of serum cortisone was significantly higher in patients on dose A (20 mg/10 mg) [670.5 (IQR 621–809.2)] compared to those on dose C (10 mg/5 mg) [562.8 (IQR 520.1–619.6),
p
= 0.01]. A negative correlation was observed between serum cortisone and bone formation markers, OC [1–49] (
r
= − 0.42,
p
= 0.03), and PINP (
r
= − 0.49,
p
= 0.01). There was a negative correlation between the AUC of night-time serum cortisone levels with the bone formation marker, OC [1–49] (
r
= − 0.41,
p
= 0.03) but there were no significant correlations between day-time serum cortisone or cortisol with bone turnover markers. There was a negative correlation between total urinary cortisol metabolites and the bone formation markers, PINP (
r
= − 0.39,
p
= 0.04), and OC [1–49] (
r
= − 0.35,
p
= 0.06).
Conclusion
Serum cortisol and cortisone and total urinary corticosteroid metabolites are negatively associated with bone turnover markers in patients receiving replacement doses of hydrocortisone, with nocturnal glucocorticoid exposure having a potentially greater influence on bone turnover.
Trial registration
Irish Medicines Board Clinical Trial Number – CT900/459/1 and EudraCT Number –
2007-005018-37
. Registration date: 07-09-2007.
Journal Article
Mechanical sensing protein PIEZO1 regulates bone homeostasis via osteoblast-osteoclast crosstalk
2020
Wolff’s law and the Utah Paradigm of skeletal physiology state that bone architecture adapts to mechanical loads. These models predict the existence of a mechanostat that links strain induced by mechanical forces to skeletal remodeling. However, how the mechanostat influences bone remodeling remains elusive. Here, we find that
Piezo1
deficiency in osteoblastic cells leads to loss of bone mass and spontaneous fractures with increased bone resorption. Furthermore,
Piezo1
-deficient mice are resistant to further bone loss and bone resorption induced by hind limb unloading, demonstrating that PIEZO1 can affect osteoblast-osteoclast crosstalk in response to mechanical forces. At the mechanistic level, in response to mechanical loads, PIEZO1 in osteoblastic cells controls the YAP-dependent expression of type II and IX collagens. In turn, these collagen isoforms regulate osteoclast differentiation. Taken together, our data identify PIEZO1 as the major skeletal mechanosensor that tunes bone homeostasis.
Mechanical forces induce bone remodeling, but how bone cells sense mechanical signaling is unclear. Here, the authors show that loss of the mechanotransduction channel
Piezo1
in osteoblastic cells impairs osteoclast activity via YAP signaling and collagen expression, leading to reduced bone mass and spontaneous fractures.
Journal Article
Osteoclast-secreted SLIT3 coordinates bone resorption and formation
by
Kim, Eun-Young
,
Ahn, Seong Hee
,
Kim, Hyeonmok
in
Animals
,
Autocrine Communication
,
Autocrine signalling
2018
Coupling is the process that links bone resorption to bone formation in a temporally and spatially coordinated manner within the remodeling cycle. Several lines of evidence point to the critical roles of osteoclast-derived coupling factors in the regulation of osteoblast performance. Here, we used a fractionated secretomic approach and identified the axon-guidance molecule SLIT3 as a clastokine that stimulated osteoblast migration and proliferation by activating β-catenin. SLIT3 also inhibited bone resorption by suppressing osteoclast differentiation in an autocrine manner. Mice deficient in Slit3 or its receptor, Robo1, exhibited osteopenic phenotypes due to a decrease in bone formation and increase in bone resorption. Mice lacking Slit3 specifically in osteoclasts had low bone mass, whereas mice with either neuron-specific Slit3 deletion or osteoblast-specific Slit3 deletion had normal bone mass, thereby indicating the importance of SLIT3 as a local determinant of bone metabolism. In postmenopausal women, higher circulating SLIT3 levels were associated with increased bone mass. Notably, injection of a truncated recombinant SLIT3 markedly rescued bone loss after an ovariectomy. Thus, these results indicate that SLIT3 plays an osteoprotective role by synchronously stimulating bone formation and inhibiting bone resorption, making it a potential therapeutic target for metabolic bone diseases.
Journal Article
A GABAergic neural circuit in the ventromedial hypothalamus mediates chronic stress–induced bone loss
2020
Homeostasis of bone metabolism is regulated by the central nervous system, and mood disorders such as anxiety are associated with bone metabolism abnormalities, yet our understanding of the central neural circuits regulating bone metabolism is limited. Here, we demonstrate that chronic stress in crewmembers resulted in decreased bone density and elevated anxiety in an isolated habitat mimicking a space station. We then used a mouse model to demonstrate that GABAergic neural circuitry in the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) mediates chronic stress-induced bone loss. We show that GABAergic inputs in the dorsomedial VMH arise from a specific group of somatostatin neurons in the posterior region of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, which is indispensable for stress-induced bone loss and is able to trigger bone loss in the absence of stressors. In addition, the sympathetic system and glutamatergic neurons in the nucleus tractus solitarius were employed to regulate stress-induced bone loss. Our study has therefore identified the central neural mechanism by which chronic stress-induced mood disorders, such as anxiety, influence bone metabolism.
Journal Article
Osteocyte necrosis triggers osteoclast-mediated bone loss through macrophage-inducible C-type lectin
2020
Although the control of bone-resorbing osteoclasts through osteocyte-derived RANKL is well defined, little is known about the regulation of osteoclasts by osteocyte death. Indeed, several skeletal diseases, such as bone fracture, osteonecrosis, and inflammation are characterized by excessive osteocyte death. Herein we show that osteoclasts sense damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) released by necrotic osteocytes via macrophage-inducible C-type lectin (Mincle), which induced their differentiation and triggered bone loss. Osteoclasts showed robust Mincle expression upon exposure to necrotic osteocytes in vitro and in vivo. RNA sequencing and metabolic analyses demonstrated that Mincle activation triggers osteoclastogenesis via ITAM-based calcium signaling pathways, skewing osteoclast metabolism toward oxidative phosphorylation. Deletion of Mincle in vivo effectively blocked the activation of osteoclasts after induction of osteocyte death, improved fracture repair, and attenuated inflammation-mediated bone loss. Furthermore, in patients with osteonecrosis, Mincle was highly expressed at skeletal sites of osteocyte death and correlated with strong osteoclastic activity. Taken together, these data point to what we believe is a novel DAMP-mediated process that allows osteoclast activation and bone loss in the context of osteocyte death.
Journal Article
Matrix IGF-1 maintains bone mass by activation of mTOR in mesenchymal stem cells
2012
Bone remodeling involves a coupled balance between bone resorption and bone formation. Xu Cao and his colleagues have shown before that mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are recruited to the surface of the bone during this process. They now show that insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) is released from the bone surface during bone resorption, where it signals the recruited MSCs to differentiate into osteoblasts. In this way, bone resorption is linked to bone formation, and IGF-1 as a target of bone therapy is suggested.
Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1), the most abundant growth factor in the bone matrix, maintains bone mass in adulthood. We now report that IGF-1 released from the bone matrix during bone remodeling stimulates osteoblastic differentiation of recruited mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) by activation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), thus maintaining proper bone microarchitecture and mass. Mice with knockout of the IGF-1 receptor (
Igf1r
) in their pre-osteoblastic cells showed lower bone mass and mineral deposition rates than wild-type mice. Further, MSCs from
Igf1r
flox/flox
mice with
Igf1r
deleted by a Cre adenovirus
in vitro
, although recruited to the bone surface after implantation, were unable to differentiate into osteoblasts. We also found that the concentrations of IGF-1 in the bone matrix and marrow of aged rats were lower than in those of young rats and directly correlated with the age-related decrease in bone mass. Likewise, in age-related osteoporosis in humans, we found that bone marrow IGF-1 concentrations were 40% lower in individuals with osteoporosis than in individuals without osteoporosis. Notably, injection of IGF-1 plus IGF binding protein 3 (IGFBP3), but not injection of IGF-1 alone, increased the concentration of IGF-1 in the bone matrix and stimulated new bone formation in aged rats. Together, these results provide mechanistic insight into how IGF-1 maintains adult bone mass, while also providing a further rationale for its therapeutic targeting to treat age-related osteoporosis.
Journal Article
The Regulation of Bone Metabolism and Disorders by Wnt Signaling
by
Uehara, Shunsuke
,
Ishihara, Akihiro
,
Saito, Mitsuru
in
Animals
,
Bone and Bones - metabolism
,
Bone cancer
2019
Wnt, a secreted glycoprotein, has an approximate molecular weight of 40 kDa, and it is a cytokine involved in various biological phenomena including ontogeny, morphogenesis, carcinogenesis, and maintenance of stem cells. The Wnt signaling pathway can be classified into two main pathways: canonical and non-canonical. Of these, the canonical Wnt signaling pathway promotes osteogenesis. Sclerostin produced by osteocytes is an inhibitor of this pathway, thereby inhibiting osteogenesis. Recently, osteoporosis treatment using an anti-sclerostin therapy has been introduced. In this review, the basics of Wnt signaling, its role in bone metabolism and its involvement in skeletal disorders have been covered. Furthermore, the clinical significance and future scopes of Wnt signaling in osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and neoplasia are discussed.
Journal Article
RANKL expressed on synovial fibroblasts is primarily responsible for bone erosions during joint inflammation
by
Nakashima, Tomoki
,
Takayanagi, Hiroshi
,
Komatsu, Noriko
in
Animals
,
Arthritis
,
Arthritis, Experimental - immunology
2016
ObjectiveRANKL is mainly expressed by synovial fibroblasts and T cells within the joints of rheumatoid arthritis patients. The relative importance of RANKL expression by these cell types for the formation of bone erosions is unclear. We therefore aimed to quantify the contribution of RANKL by each cell type to osteoclast differentiation and bone destruction during inflammatory arthritis.MethodsRANKL was specifically deleted in T cells (Tnfsf11flox/Δ Lck-Cre), in collagen VI expressing cells including synovial fibroblasts (Tnfsf11flox/Δ Col6a1-Cre) and in collagen II expressing cells including articular chondrocytes (Tnfsf11flox/Δ Col2a1-Cre). Erosive disease was induced using the collagen antibody-induced arthritis (CAIA) and collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) models. Osteoclasts and cartilage degradation were assessed by histology and bone erosions were assessed by micro-CT.ResultsThe inflammatory joint score during CAIA was equivalent in all mice regardless of cell-targeted deletion of RANKL. Significant increases in osteoclast numbers and bone erosions were observed in both the Tnfsf11flox/Δ and the Tnfsf11flox/Δ Lck-Cre groups during CAIA; however, the Tnfsf11flox/Δ Col6a1-Cre mice showed significant protection against osteoclast formation and bone erosions. Similar results on osteoclast formation and bone erosions were obtained in CIA mice. The deletion of RANKL on any cell type did not prevent articular cartilage loss in either model of arthritis used.ConclusionsThe expression of RANKL on synovial fibroblasts rather than T cells is predominantly responsible for the formation of osteoclasts and erosions during inflammatory arthritis. Synovial fibroblasts would be the best direct target in RANKL inhibition therapies.
Journal Article
Inflammatory bone loss: pathogenesis and therapeutic intervention
2012
Key Points
Bone homeostasis is dependent on the concerted actions of bone-building osteoblasts and bone-degrading osteoclasts — a process called bone remodelling.
Two of the major factors that induce osteoblast differentiation and activation are: the signalling mediated by bone morphogenetic proteins via runt-related transcription factor 2; and the WNT–Frizzled–β-catenin pathway. Conversely, Dickkopf-related protein 1 (DKK1) and sclerostin inhibit osteoblast activation.
Major molecules involved in osteoclast differentiation and activation include macrophage colony-stimulating factor and receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB (RANK) as well as its ligand (RANKL).
Inflammation is associated with the overproduction of various cytokines, such as tumour necrosis factor, interleukin-1 (IL-1), IL-6 or IL-17. Their upregulation in the course of inflammation leads to excessive bone degradation mainly due to hyperactivation of osteoclasts, although some cytokines can also impair osteoblast function.
Many diseases lead to inflammatory bone loss, including inflammatory bowel disease, chronic obstructive lung disease, cystic fibrosis, periodontitis, rheumatoid arthritis and other inflammatory diseases.
Inflammatory bone loss is always systemic, and in some diseases — such as rheumatoid arthritis or periodontitis — it can also involve local bone.
Therapies interfering with inflammation also affect systemic inflammatory bone loss, primarily by reducing the effects of cytokines on osteoclast activation; however, many of these treatments will not fully control inflammation. Owing to this ongoing inflammatory activity (even at low levels), bone loss will continue to accrue and therefore also requires specific targeting of bone cells.
Bisphosphonates and denosumab are among the bone-targeting therapies that have been shown to be effective in treating inflammatory bone loss, but it is assumed that blockers of DKK1 and sclerostin — which are upregulated by cytokines and inhibit osteoblast repair mechanisms — are also likely to be effective.
Bone continuously undergoes building and degradation — a process known as bone remodelling. This tightly controlled process can be dysregulated by chronic inflammation, and bone loss is commonly associated with inflammatory diseases. Here, Redlich and Smolen discuss the molecular mechanisms mediating the inflammatory loss of bone and present strategies and agents for therapeutic intervention.
Bone is a tissue undergoing continuous building and degradation. This remodelling is a tightly regulated process that can be disturbed by many factors, particularly hormonal changes. Chronic inflammation can also perturb bone metabolism and promote increased bone loss. Inflammatory diseases can arise all over the body, including in the musculoskeletal system (for example, rheumatoid arthritis), the intestine (for example, inflammatory bowel disease), the oral cavity (for example, periodontitis) and the lung (for example, cystic fibrosis). Wherever inflammatory diseases occur, systemic effects on bone will ensue, as well as increased fracture risk. Here, we discuss the cellular and signalling pathways underlying, and strategies for therapeutically interfering with, the inflammatory loss of bone.
Journal Article
Fibroblast growth factor 21 promotes bone loss by potentiating the effects of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ
by
Bookout, Angie L
,
Dechow, Paul C
,
Wei, Wei
in
Adipocytes
,
adipogenesis
,
Adipogenesis - drug effects
2012
The endocrine hormone fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) is a powerful modulator of glucose and lipid metabolism and a promising drug for type 2 diabetes. Here we identify FGF21 as a potent regulator of skeletal homeostasis. Both genetic and pharmacologic FGF21 gain of function lead to a striking decrease in bone mass. In contrast, FGF21 loss of function leads to a reciprocal high-bone-mass phenotype. Mechanistically, FGF21 inhibits osteoblastogenesis and stimulates adipogenesis from bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells by potentiating the activity of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPAR-γ). Consequently, FGF21 deletion prevents the deleterious bone loss side effect of the PPAR-γ agonist rosiglitazone. Therefore, FGF21 is a critical rheostat for bone turnover and a key integrator of bone and energy metabolism. These results reveal that skeletal fragility may be an undesirable consequence of chronic FGF21 administration.
Journal Article