Literature DB >> 20200987

Sclerostin and the regulation of bone formation: Effects in hip osteoarthritis and femoral neck fracture.

Jon Power1, Kenneth E S Poole, Rutger van Bezooijen, Michael Doube, Ana M Caballero-Alías, Clemens Lowik, Socrates Papapoulos, Jonathan Reeve, Nigel Loveridge.   

Abstract

Remodeling imbalance in the elderly femoral neck can result in thin cortices and porosity predisposing to hip fracture. Hip osteoarthritis protects against intracapsular hip fracture. By secreting sclerostin, osteocytes may inhibit Wnt signaling and reduce bone formation by osteoblasts. We hypothesised that differences in osteocytic sclerostin expression might account for differences in osteonal bone-formation activity between controls and subjects with hip fracture or hip osteoarthritis. Using specific antibody staining, we determined the osteocytic expression of sclerostin within osteons of the femoral neck cortex in bone removed from subjects undergoing surgery for hip osteoarthritis (hOA: 5 males, 5 females, 49 to 92 years of age) or hip fracture fixation (FNF: 5 males, 5 females, 73 to 87 years of age) and controls (C: 5 males, 6 females, 61 to 90 years of age). Sclerostin expression and distances of each osteocyte to the canal surface and cement line were assessed for all osteonal osteocytes in 636 unremodeled osteons chosen from fields ( approximately 0.5 mm in diameter) with at least one canal staining for alkaline phosphatase (ALP), a marker of bone formation. In adjacent sections, ALP staining was used to classify basic multicellular unit (BMUs) as quiescent or actively forming bone (ALP(+)). The areal densities of scl(-) and scl(+) osteocytes (number of cells per unit area) in the BMU were inversely correlated and were strong determinants of ALP status in the BMU. In controls and hip fracture patients only, sclerostin-negative osteocytes were closer to osteonal surfaces than positively stained cells. Osteon maturity (progress to closure) was strongly associated with the proportion of osteonal osteocytes expressing sclerostin, and sclerostin expression was the chief determinant of ALP status. hOA patients had 18% fewer osteocytes per unit bone area than controls, fewer osteocytes expressed sclerostin on average than in controls, but wide variation was seen between subjects. Thus, in most hOA patients, there was increased osteonal ALP staining and reduced sclerostin staining of osteocytes. In FNF patients, newly forming osteons were similar in this respect to hOA osteons, but with closure, there was a much sharper reduction in ALP staining that was only partly accounted for by the increased proportions of osteonal osteocytes staining positive for sclerostin. There was no evidence for a greater effect on ALP expression by osteocytes near the osteonal canal. In line with data from blocking antibody experiments, osteonal sclerostin appears to be a strong determinant of whether osteoblasts actively produce bone. In hOA, reduced sclerostin expression likely mediates increased osteoblastic activity in the intracapsular cortex. In FNF, full osteonal closure is postponed, with increased porosity, in part because the proportion of osteocytes expressing sclerostin increases sharply with osteonal maturation.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20200987     DOI: 10.1002/jbmr.70

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Miner Res        ISSN: 0884-0431            Impact factor:   6.741


  18 in total

Review 1.  Role of bone architecture and anatomy in osteoarthritis.

Authors:  Julie C Baker-LePain; Nancy E Lane
Journal:  Bone       Date:  2012-01-24       Impact factor: 4.398

2.  Reduced Sirtuin1 expression at the femoral neck in women who sustained an osteoporotic hip fracture.

Authors:  M El-Haj; I Gurt; E Cohen-Kfir; V Dixit; H Artsi; L Kandel; O Yakubovsky; O Safran; R Dresner-Pollak
Journal:  Osteoporos Int       Date:  2016-02-22       Impact factor: 4.507

3.  Sclerostin is a locally acting regulator of late-osteoblast/preosteocyte differentiation and regulates mineralization through a MEPE-ASARM-dependent mechanism.

Authors:  Gerald J Atkins; Peter S Rowe; Hui P Lim; Katie J Welldon; Renee Ormsby; Asiri R Wijenayaka; Lesya Zelenchuk; Andreas Evdokiou; David M Findlay
Journal:  J Bone Miner Res       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 6.741

Review 4.  Role of cortical bone in hip fracture.

Authors:  Jonathan Reeve
Journal:  Bonekey Rep       Date:  2017-01-13

Review 5.  A review of osteocyte function and the emerging importance of sclerostin.

Authors:  Jocelyn T Compton; Francis Y Lee
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am       Date:  2014-10-01       Impact factor: 5.284

6.  Mechanobiological Mechanisms of Load-Induced Osteoarthritis in the Mouse Knee.

Authors:  Olufunmilayo O Adebayo; Derek T Holyoak; Marjolein C H van der Meulen
Journal:  J Biomech Eng       Date:  2019-07-01       Impact factor: 2.097

Review 7.  Sclerostin expression and functions beyond the osteocyte.

Authors:  Megan M Weivoda; Stephanie J Youssef; Merry Jo Oursler
Journal:  Bone       Date:  2016-11-23       Impact factor: 4.398

Review 8.  Role of endocrine and paracrine factors in the adaptation of bone to mechanical loading.

Authors:  Joanna S Price; Toshihiro Sugiyama; Gabriel L Galea; Lee B Meakin; Andrew Sunters; Lance E Lanyon
Journal:  Curr Osteoporos Rep       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 5.096

9.  Fourier transform infrared imaging of femoral neck bone: reduced heterogeneity of mineral-to-matrix and carbonate-to-phosphate and more variable crystallinity in treatment-naive fracture cases compared with fracture-free controls.

Authors:  Samuel Gourion-Arsiquaud; Lyudmilla Lukashova; Jon Power; Nigel Loveridge; Jonathan Reeve; Adele L Boskey
Journal:  J Bone Miner Res       Date:  2013-01       Impact factor: 6.741

10.  Inhibition of pyroptosis attenuates Staphylococcus aureus-induced bone injury in traumatic osteomyelitis.

Authors:  Xiaobo Zhu; Kaijia Zhang; Ke Lu; Tianshu Shi; Siyu Shen; Xingren Chen; Jian Dong; Wang Gong; Zhengyuan Bao; Yong Shi; Yuze Ma; Huajian Teng; Qing Jiang
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2019-04
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