| Literature DB >> 25633418 |
Mohd Parvez Khan1, Abhishek Kumar Singh2, Amit Arvind Joharapurkar3, Manisha Yadav2, Sonal Shree4, Harish Kumar2, Anagha Gurjar2, Jay Sharan Mishra2, Mahesh Chandra Tiwari1, Geet Kumar Nagar1, Sudhir Kumar5, Ravishankar Ramachandran4, Anupam Sharan6, Mukul Rameshchandra Jain3, Arun Kumar Trivedi2, Rakesh Maurya5, Madan Madhav Godbole7, Jiaur Rahaman Gayen8, Sabyasachi Sanyal9, Naibedya Chattopadhyay10.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes is associated with increased fracture risk and delayed fracture healing; the underlying mechanism, however, remains poorly understood. We systematically investigated skeletal pathology in leptin receptor-deficient diabetic mice on a C57BLKS background (db). Compared with wild type (wt), db mice displayed reduced peak bone mass and age-related trabecular and cortical bone loss. Poor skeletal outcome in db mice contributed high-glucose- and nonesterified fatty acid-induced osteoblast apoptosis that was associated with peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator 1-α (PGC-1α) downregulation and upregulation of skeletal muscle atrogenes in osteoblasts. Osteoblast depletion of the atrogene muscle ring finger protein-1 (MuRF1) protected against gluco- and lipotoxicity-induced apoptosis. Osteoblast-specific PGC-1α upregulation by 6-C-β-d-glucopyranosyl-(2S,3S)-(+)-5,7,3',4'-tetrahydroxydihydroflavonol (GTDF), an adiponectin receptor 1 (AdipoR1) agonist, as well as metformin in db mice that lacked AdipoR1 expression in muscle but not bone restored osteopenia to wt levels without improving diabetes. Both GTDF and metformin protected against gluco- and lipotoxicity-induced osteoblast apoptosis, and depletion of PGC-1α abolished this protection. Although AdipoR1 but not AdipoR2 depletion abolished protection by GTDF, metformin action was not blocked by AdipoR depletion. We conclude that PGC-1α upregulation in osteoblasts could reverse type 2 diabetes-associated deterioration in skeletal health.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25633418 DOI: 10.2337/db14-1611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461