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Constitutively active PTH/PTHrP receptor specifically expressed in osteoblasts enhances bone formation induced by bone marrow ablation

✍ Scribed by Noriaki Ono; Kazuhisa Nakashima; Ernestina Schipani; Tadayoshi Hayata; Yoichi Ezura; Kunimichi Soma; Henry M. Kronenberg; Masaki Noda


Book ID
102882957
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
785 KB
Volume
227
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Bone is maintained by continuous bone formation by osteoblasts provided by proliferation and differentiation of osteoprogenitors. Parathyroid hormone (PTH) activates bone formation, but because of the complexity of cells in the osteoblast lineage, how these osteoprogenitors are regulated by PTH in vivo is incompletely understood. To elucidate how signals by PTH in differentiated osteoblasts regulate osteoprogenitors in vivo, we conducted bone marrow ablation using Col1a1‐constitutively active PTH/PTHrP receptor (caPPR) transgenic mice. These mice express caPPR specifically in osteoblasts by using 2.3 kb Col1a1 promoter and showed higher trabecular bone volume under steady‐state conditions. In contrast, after bone marrow ablation, stromal cells recruited from bone surface extensively proliferated in the marrow cavity in transgenic mice, compared to limited proliferation in wild‐type mice. Whereas de novo bone formation was restricted to the ablated area in wild‐type mice, the entire marrow cavity, including not only ablated area but also outside the ablated area, was filled with newly formed bone in transgenic mice. Bone mineral density was significantly increased after ablation in transgenic mice. Bone marrow cell culture in osteogenic medium revealed that alkaline phosphatase‐positive area was markedly increased in the cells obtained from transgenic mice. Furthermore, mRNA expression of Wnt‐signaling molecules such as LRP5, Wnt7b, and Wnt10b were upregulated after marrow ablation in bone marrow cells of transgenic mice. These results indicate that constitutive activation of PTH/PTHrP receptor in differentiated osteoblasts enhances bone marrow ablation‐induced recruitment, proliferation, and differentiation of osteoprogenitors. J. Cell. Physiol. 227: 408–415, 2012. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.