Osteocyte- and late Osteoblast-derived NOTUM Reduces Cortical Bone Mass in Mice
American journal of physiology. Endocrinology and metabolism
Nilsson, KH;Henning, P;El Shahawy, M;Wu, J;Koskela, A;Tuukkanen, J;Perret, C;Lerner, UH;Ohlsson, C;Movérare-Skrtic, S;
PMID: 33749332 | DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00565.2020
Osteoporosis is a common skeletal disease, with increased risk of fractures. Currently available osteoporosis treatments reduce the risk of vertebral fractures, mainly dependent on trabecular bone, whereas the effect on non-vertebral fractures, mainly dependent on cortical bone, is less pronounced. WNT signaling is a crucial regulator of bone homeostasis, and the activity of WNTs is inhibited by NOTUM, a secreted WNT lipase. We previously demonstrated that conditional inactivation of NOTUM in all osteoblast lineage cells increases the cortical but not the trabecular bone mass. The aim of the present study was to determine if NOTUM increasing cortical bone is derived from osteoblast precursors/early osteoblasts or from osteocytes/late osteoblasts. First, we demonstrated Notum mRNA expression in Dmp1-expressing osteocytes and late osteoblasts in cortical bone using in situ hybridization. We then developed a mouse model with inactivation of NOTUM in Dmp1 expressing osteocytes and late osteoblasts (Dmp1-creNotumflox/flox mice). We observed that the Dmp1-creNotumflox/flox mice displayed a substantial reduction of Notum mRNA in cortical bone, resulting in increased cortical bone mass and decreased cortical porosity in femur, but no change in trabecular bone volume fraction (BV/TV) in femur or in the lumbar vertebrae L5 in Dmp1-creNotumflox/flox mice as compared to control mice. In conclusion, osteocytes and late osteoblasts are the principal source of NOTUM in cortical bone, and NOTUM derived from osteocytes/late osteoblasts reduces cortical bone mass. These findings demonstrate that inhibition of osteocyte/late osteoblast-derived NOTUM might be an interesting pharmacological target to increase cortical bone mass and reduce non-vertebral fracture risk.
García-Añoveros, J;Clancy, JC;Foo, CZ;García-Gómez, I;Zhou, Y;Homma, K;Cheatham, MA;Duggan, A;
PMID: 35508658 | DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04668-3
The cochlea uses two types of mechanosensory cell to detect sounds. A single row of inner hair cells (IHCs) synapse onto neurons to transmit sensory information to the brain, and three rows of outer hair cells (OHCs) selectively amplify auditory inputs1. So far, two transcription factors have been implicated in the specific differentiation of OHCs, whereas, to our knowledge, none has been identified in the differentiation of IHCs2-4. One such transcription factor for OHCs, INSM1, acts during a crucial embryonic period to consolidate the OHC fate, preventing OHCs from transdifferentiating into IHCs2. In the absence of INSM1, embryonic OHCs misexpress a core set of IHC-specific genes, which we predict are involved in IHC differentiation. Here we find that one of these genes, Tbx2, is a master regulator of IHC versus OHC differentiation in mice. Ablation of Tbx2 in embryonic IHCs results in their development as OHCs, expressing early OHC markers such as Insm1 and eventually becoming completely mature OHCs in the position of IHCs. Furthermore, Tbx2 is epistatic to Insm1: in the absence of both genes, cochleae generate only OHCs, which suggests that TBX2 is necessary for the abnormal transdifferentiation of INSM1-deficient OHCs into IHCs, as well as for normal IHC differentiation. Ablation of Tbx2 in postnatal, largely differentiated IHCs makes them transdifferentiate directly into OHCs, replacing IHC features with those of mature and not embryonic OHCs. Finally, ectopic expression of Tbx2 in OHCs results in their transdifferentiation into IHCs. Hence, Tbx2 is both necessary and sufficient to make IHCs distinct from OHCs and maintain this difference throughout development.
RSPO3 is important for trabecular bone and fracture risk in mice and humans
Nilsson, KH;Henning, P;Shahawy, ME;Nethander, M;Andersen, TL;Ejersted, C;Wu, J;Gustafsson, KL;Koskela, A;Tuukkanen, J;Souza, PPC;Tuckermann, J;Lorentzon, M;Ruud, LE;Lehtimäki, T;Tobias, JH;Zhou, S;Lerner, UH;Richards, JB;Movérare-Skrtic, S;Ohlsson, C;
PMID: 34389713 | DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25124-2
With increasing age of the population, countries across the globe are facing a substantial increase in osteoporotic fractures. Genetic association signals for fractures have been reported at the RSPO3 locus, but the causal gene and the underlying mechanism are unknown. Here we show that the fracture reducing allele at the RSPO3 locus associate with increased RSPO3 expression both at the mRNA and protein levels, increased trabecular bone mineral density and reduced risk mainly of distal forearm fractures in humans. We also demonstrate that RSPO3 is expressed in osteoprogenitor cells and osteoblasts and that osteoblast-derived RSPO3 is the principal source of RSPO3 in bone and an important regulator of vertebral trabecular bone mass and bone strength in adult mice. Mechanistic studies revealed that RSPO3 in a cell-autonomous manner increases osteoblast proliferation and differentiation. In conclusion, RSPO3 regulates vertebral trabecular bone mass and bone strength in mice and fracture risk in humans.
Harb, K;Richter, M;Neelagandan, N;Magrinelli, E;Harfoush, H;Kuechler, K;Henis, M;Hermanns-Borgmeyer, I;Calderon de Anda, F;Duncan, K;
PMID: 35262486 | DOI: 10.7554/eLife.55199
In the neocortex, functionally distinct areas process specific types of information. Area identity is established by morphogens and transcriptional master regulators, but downstream mechanisms driving area-specific neuronal specification remain unclear. Here, we reveal a role for RNA-binding proteins in defining area-specific cytoarchitecture. Mice lacking Pum2 or overexpressing human TDP-43 show apparent 'motorization' of layers IV and V of primary somatosensory cortex (S1), characterized by dramatic expansion of cells co-expressing Sox5 and Bcl11b/Ctip2, a hallmark of subcerebral projection neurons, at the expense of cells expressing the layer IV neuronal marker Rorβ. Moreover, retrograde labeling experiments with cholera toxin B in Pum2; Emx1-Cre and TDP43A315T mice revealed a corresponding increase in subcerebral connectivity of these neurons in S1. Intriguingly, other key features of somatosensory area identity are largely preserved, suggesting that Pum2 and TDP-43 may function in a downstream program, rather than controlling area identity per se. Transfection of primary neurons and in utero electroporation (IUE) suggest cell-autonomous and post-mitotic modulation of Sox5, Bcl11b/Ctip2, and Rorβ levels. Mechanistically, we find that Pum2 and TDP-43 directly interact with and affect the translation of mRNAs encoding Sox5, Bcl11b/Ctip2, and Rorβ. In contrast, effects on the levels of these mRNAs were not detectable in qRT-PCR or single-molecule fluorescent in situ hybridization assays, and we also did not detect effects on their splicing or polyadenylation patterns. Our results support the notion that post-transcriptional regulatory programs involving translational regulation and mediated by Pum2 and TDP-43 contribute to elaboration of area-specific neuronal identity and connectivity in the neocortex.
Mertz, E;Makareeva, E;Mirigian, L;Leikin, S;
| DOI: 10.1002/jbm4.10701
Relevance of mineralized nodules in two-dimensional (2D) osteoblast/osteocyte cultures to bone biology, pathology, and engineering is a decades old question, but a comprehensive answer appears to be still wanting. Bone-like cells, extracellular matrix (ECM), and mineral were all reported but so were non-bone-like ones. Many studies described seemingly bone-like cell-ECM structures based on similarity to few select bone features _in vivo_, yet no studies examined multiple bone features simultaneously and none systematically studied all types of structures coexisting in the same culture. Here, we report such comprehensive analysis of 2D cultures based on light and electron microscopies, Raman microspectroscopy, gene expression, and _in situ_ mRNA hybridization. We demonstrate that 2D cultures of primary cells from mouse calvaria do form _bona fide_ bone. Cells, ECM, and mineral within it exhibit morphology, structure, ultrastructure, composition, spatial-temporal gene expression pattern, and growth consistent with intramembranous ossification. However, this bone is just one of at least five different types of cell-ECM structures coexisting in the same 2D culture, which vary widely in their resemblance to bone and ability to mineralize. We show that the other two mineralizing structures may represent abnormal (disrupted) bone and cartilage-like formation with chondrocyte-to-osteoblast trans differentiation. The two non-mineralizing cell-ECM structures may mimic periosteal cambium and pathological, non-mineralizing osteoid. Importantly, the most commonly used culture conditions (10 mM β-glycerophosphate) induce artificial mineralization of all cell-ECM structures, which then become barely distinguishable. We therefore discuss conditions and approaches promoting formation of _bona fide_ bone and simple means for distinguishing it from the other cell-ECM structures. Our findings may improve osteoblast differentiation and function analyses based on 2D cultures and extend applications of these cultures to general bone biology and tissue engineering research.
Angelozzi, M;Pellegrino da Silva, R;Gonzalez, MV;Lefebvre, V;
PMID: 35830813 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111045
The mammalian skull vault is essential to shape the head and protect the brain, but the cellular and molecular events underlying its development remain incompletely understood. Single-cell transcriptomic profiling from early to late mouse embryonic stages provides a detailed atlas of cranial lineages. It distinguishes various populations of progenitors and reveals a high expression of SOXC genes (encoding the SOX4, SOX11, and SOX12 transcription factors) early in development in actively proliferating and myofibroblast-like osteodermal progenitors. SOXC inactivation in these cells causes severe skull and skin underdevelopment due to the limited expansion of cell populations before and upon lineage commitment. SOXC genes enhance the expression of gene signatures conferring dynamic cellular and molecular properties, including actin cytoskeleton assembly, chromatin remodeling, and signaling pathway induction and responsiveness. These findings shed light onto craniogenic mechanisms and SOXC functions and suggest that similar mechanisms could decisively control many developmental, adult, pathological, and regenerative processes.
Dzamukova, M;Brunner, TM;Miotla-Zarebska, J;Heinrich, F;Brylka, L;Mashreghi, MF;Kusumbe, A;Kühn, R;Schinke, T;Vincent, TL;Löhning, M;
PMID: 35650194 | DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-30618-8
Bone growth requires a specialised, highly angiogenic blood vessel subtype, so-called type H vessels, which pave the way for osteoblasts surrounding these vessels. At the end of adolescence, type H vessels differentiate into quiescent type L endothelium lacking the capacity to promote bone growth. Until now, the signals that switch off type H vessel identity and thus limit adolescent bone growth have remained ill defined. Here we show that mechanical forces, associated with increased body weight at the end of adolescence, trigger the mechanoreceptor PIEZO1 and thereby mediate enhanced production of the kinase FAM20C in osteoblasts. FAM20C, the major kinase of the secreted phosphoproteome, phosphorylates dentin matrix protein 1, previously identified as a key factor in bone mineralization. Thereupon, dentin matrix protein 1 is secreted from osteoblasts in a burst-like manner. Extracellular dentin matrix protein 1 inhibits vascular endothelial growth factor signalling by preventing phosphorylation of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2. Hence, secreted dentin matrix protein 1 transforms type H vessels into type L to limit bone growth activity and enhance bone mineralization. The discovered mechanism may suggest new options for the treatment of diseases characterised by aberrant activity of bone and vessels such as osteoarthritis, osteoporosis and osteosarcoma.
Liang, T;Hu, Y;Zhang, H;Xu, Q;Smith, CE;Zhang, C;Kim, JW;Wang, SK;Saunders, TL;Lu, Y;Hu, JC;Simmer, JP;
PMID: 34667213 | DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-00219-4
Non-syndromic inherited defects of tooth dentin are caused by two classes of dominant negative/gain-of-function mutations in dentin sialophosphoprotein (DSPP): 5' mutations affecting an N-terminal targeting sequence and 3' mutations that shift translation into the - 1 reading frame. DSPP defects cause an overlapping spectrum of phenotypes classified as dentin dysplasia type II and dentinogenesis imperfecta types II and III. Using CRISPR/Cas9, we generated a Dspp-1fs mouse model by introducing a FLAG-tag followed by a single nucleotide deletion that translated 493 extraneous amino acids before termination. Developing incisors and/or molars from this mouse and a DsppP19L mouse were characterized by morphological assessment, bSEM, nanohardness testing, histological analysis, in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. DsppP19L dentin contained dentinal tubules but grew slowly and was softer and less mineralized than the wild-type. DsppP19L incisor enamel was softer than normal, while molar enamel showed reduced rod/interrod definition. Dspp-1fs dentin formation was analogous to reparative dentin: it lacked dentinal tubules, contained cellular debris, and was significantly softer and thinner than Dspp+/+ and DsppP19L dentin. The Dspp-1fs incisor enamel appeared normal and was comparable to the wild-type in hardness. We conclude that 5' and 3' Dspp mutations cause dental malformations through different pathological mechanisms and can be regarded as distinct disorders.