| Literature DB >> 29504949 |
Beom-Jun Kim1, Young-Sun Lee2, Sun-Young Lee2, Wook-Young Baek2, Young Jin Choi2, Sung Ah Moon2, Seung Hun Lee1, Jung-Eun Kim3, Eun-Ju Chang4, Eun-Young Kim4, Jin Yoon5, Seung-Whan Kim5, Sung Ho Ryu6, Sun-Kyeong Lee7, Joseph A Lorenzo8, Seong Hee Ahn9, Hyeonmok Kim1, Ki-Up Lee1, Ghi Su Kim1, Jung-Min Koh1.
Abstract
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.Entities:
Keywords: Bone Biology; Coupling factors
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29504949 PMCID: PMC5873876 DOI: 10.1172/JCI91086
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808