Literature DB >> 33175185

Immunocytochemical assessment of cell differentiation of podoplanin-positive osteoblasts into osteocytes in murine bone.

Tomoya Nagai1,2, Tomoka Hasegawa3, Tomomaya Yamamoto4, Hiromi Hongo1, Miki Abe1, Taiji Yoshida1, Ayako Yokoyama1,5, Paulo Henrique Luiz de Freitas6, Minqi Li7, Atsuro Yokoyama2, Norio Amizuka1.   

Abstract

In this study, we examined the immunolocalization of podoplanin/E11, CD44, actin filaments, and phosphorylated ezrin in the osteoblasts on the verge of differentiating into osteocytes in murine femora and tibiae. When observing under stimulated emission depletion microscopy, unlike podoplanin-negative osteoblasts, podoplanin-positive osteoblasts showed a rearranged assembly of actin filaments along the cell membranes which resembled that of embedded osteocytes. In the metaphysis, i.e., the bone remodeling site, CD44-bearing osteoclasts were either proximal to or in contact with podoplanin-positive osteoblasts, but the podoplanin-positive osteoblasts also localized CD44 on their own cell surface. These podoplanin-positive osteoblasts, which either possessed CD44 on their cell surface or were close to CD44-bearing osteoclasts, showed phosphorylated ezrin-positivity on the cell membranes. Therefore, the CD44/podoplanin interaction on the cell surface may be involved in the osteoblastic differentiation into osteocytes in the metaphyses, via the mediation of podoplanin-driven ezrin phosphorylation and the subsequent reorganized assembly of actin filaments. Consistently, the protein expression of phosphorylated ezrin was increased after CD44 administration in calvarial culture. Conversely, in modeling sites such as the cortical bones, podoplanin-positive osteoblasts were uniformly localized at certain intervals even without contact with CD44-positive bone marrow cells; furthermore, they also exhibited phosphorylated ezrin immunoreactivity along their cell membranes. Taken together, it seems likely that the CD44/podoplanin interaction is involved in osteoblastic differentiation into osteocytes in the bone remodeling area but not in modeling sites.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Actin filament; CD44; ERM family; Osteoblast; Osteocyte; Podoplanin

Year:  2020        PMID: 33175185     DOI: 10.1007/s00418-020-01937-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Histochem Cell Biol        ISSN: 0948-6143            Impact factor:   4.304


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Journal:  Biomed Res       Date:  2011-08       Impact factor: 1.203

7.  Sclerostin is differently immunolocalized in metaphyseal trabecules and cortical bones of mouse tibiae.

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9.  Are podoplanin and ezrin involved in the invasion process of the ameloblastomas?

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10.  Characterization and cloning of a novel glycoprotein expressed by stromal cells in T-dependent areas of peripheral lymphoid tissues.

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