| Literature DB >> 33193107 |
Celia L Gregson1, Emma L Duncan2.
Abstract
The phenotypic trait of high bone mass (HBM) is an excellent example of the nexus between common and rare disease genetics. HBM may arise from carriage of many 'high bone mineral density [BMD]'-associated alleles, and certainly the genetic architecture of individuals with HBM is enriched with high BMD variants identified through genome-wide association studies of BMD. HBM may also arise as a monogenic skeletal disorder, due to abnormalities in bone formation, bone resorption, and/or bone turnover. Individuals with monogenic disorders of HBM usually, though not invariably, have other skeletal abnormalities (such as mandible enlargement) and thus are best regarded as having a skeletal dysplasia rather than just isolated high BMD. A binary etiological division of HBM into polygenic vs. monogenic, however, would be excessively simplistic: the phenotype of individuals carrying rare variants of large effect can still be modified by their common variant polygenic background, and by the environment. HBM disorders-whether predominantly polygenic or monogenic in origin-are not only interesting clinically and genetically: they provide insights into bone processes that can be exploited therapeutically, with benefits both for individuals with these rare bone disorders and importantly for the many people affected by the commonest bone disease worldwide-i.e., osteoporosis. In this review we detail the genetic architecture of HBM; we provide a conceptual framework for considering HBM in the clinical context; and we discuss monogenic and polygenic causes of HBM with particular emphasis on anabolic causes of HBM.Entities:
Keywords: LRP5; SOST; bone mineral density (BMD); dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA); genome-wide association studies (GWAS); high bone mass (HBM); osteopetrosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33193107 PMCID: PMC7658409 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2020.595653
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Causes of a high BMD measurement on a DXA scan.
| Artefactual causes of raised BMD—no true increase in bone mass | Genetic Contribution | Refs. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monogenic | Polygenic | ||||
| Osteoarthritis |
| Yes | ( | ||
| DISH: Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis | Yes | Yes | ( | ||
| Ankylosing spondylitis | Yes | ( | |||
| Vertebral fractures | Yes | Yes | ( | ||
| Vascular calcification | Yes | Yes | ( | ||
| Thalassemia major | Yes | ( | |||
| Gaucher’s disease (splenomegaly overlies the lumbar spine DXA field) | Yes | ( | |||
| Abdominal abscesses | ( | ||||
| Gallstones | ( | ||||
| Renal calculi | Yes | ( | |||
| Gluteal silicon implants | ( | ||||
| Intestinal barium | |||||
| Surgical metalwork | ( | ||||
| Laminectomy | ( | ||||
| Vertebroplasty & kyphoplasty | |||||
| Tumors | Primary malignancies | Yes | Yes | ( | |
| Chronic infective osteomyelitis | |||||
| SAPHO (Synovitis Acne Pustulosis Hyperostosis and Osteitis) syndrome | Yes | ( | |||
| CKD-MBD (Chronic Kidney Disease-Metabolic Bone Disorder) | Yes | Yes | ( | ||
| Paget’s disease of Bone (PDB) | Yes | Yes | ( | ||
| Early onset Paget’s like syndromes | Yes | ( | |||
| X-linked hypophosphatemia (XLH) | Yes | ( | |||
| Osteogenesis imperfecta associated with mutations affecting the carboxy-terminal-propeptide cleavage site of the type 1 procollagen chain | Yes | ( | |||
| Gnathodiaphyseal dysplasia | Yes | ( | |||
| Fluorosis | ( | ||||
| Acromegaly | Yes | Yes | ( | ||
| Hepatitis C-associated osteosclerosis | ( | ||||
| Myelofibrosis | Yes | Yes | ( | ||
| Mastocytosis | Yes | ( | |||
| Oestrogen replacement implants | ( | ||||
While there are no forms of monogenic OA, there are many monogenic skeletal dysplasias with degenerative joint disease—e.g. spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia tarda, achondroplasias.
vertebral fractures occur in osteogenesis imperfecta.
CKD-MBD increases in BMD can also be generalized.
Figure 1Schematic diagram of reported mutations affecting osteoblastic Wnt signaling. (1) LRP4 mutations coding for the 3rd β-propellor impair sclerostin binding; (2) LRP5 and LRP6 mutations coding for the 1st β-propellor impair sclerostin binding; (3) SOST mutations inhibit sclerostin production by osteocytes. Reductions in the inhibitory effects of sclerostin allows LRP5/6 to interact with Wnt and its co-receptor Frizzled, which prevents phosphorylation of β-catenin allowing it to accumulate in the cytoplasm of the osteoblast. Translocation of β-catenin to the nucleus activates transcription of target genes. This activation of canonical Wnt/β-catenin signaling increases osteoblastic bone formation. The intracellular consequences of LRP4-sclerostin binding are less well characterized; however, reductions in LRP4-sclerostin binding have a similar effect to increase osteoblastic bone formation. LDLR, low-density-lipoprotein receptor. LRP, LDLR related proteins; PPPSP, Proline, Proline, Proline, Serine, Proline; EGF, epidermal growth factor; NPxY, Aspartate, Proline, any amino acid, Tyrosine; YWTD, Tyrosine, Tryptophan, Threonine, Aspartate.
Inherited HBM conditions due to enhanced bone formation: gene defects, function, and clinical characteristics.
| Condition | MIM | Inheritance | Gene | Mutation | Protein | Function | Clinical Features | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Increased bone formation | ||||||||
| 269500 | AR | Loss of function | Sclerostin | Osteoblast Wnt signaling inhibitor | Cutaneous digital syndactyly excessive height. Skull/mandible thickening, tori | ( | ||
| 239100 | AR | Reduced function | Sclerostin | Osteoblast Wnt signaling inhibitor | No syndactyly, no excess height. Skull/mandible thickening, tori | ( | ||
| 604270 | AD & AR | Loss of function | LRP4 | Impaired sclerostin-LRP4 interaction | Syndactyly, dysplastic nails, gait disturbance, facial nerve palsy, deafness | ( | ||
| 603506 | AD | Gain of function | LRP5 | Osteoblast cell membrane co-receptor regulating Wnt signaling | Asymptomatic or tori | ( | ||
| awaited | AD | Gain of function | LRP6 | Osteoblast cell membrane co-receptor regulating Wnt signaling | Mandible thickening, torus palatinus, teeth encased in bone, absence of adult maxillary lateral incisors, inability to float. Fracture resistance. Increased height | ( | ||
| awaited | AD | Loss of function | SMAD9 | Inhibits BMP dependent targetgene transcription to reduce osteoblast activity | Mandible enlargement, broad frame, torus palitinus/mandibularis, pes planus, increased shoe size, inability to float | ( | ||
| 123000218400 | AD | Gain of function | Homolog of mouse ANK | Osteoclast-reactive vacuolar proton pump | Macrocephaly, cranial hyperostosis CN palsies, wide nasal bridge, dental overcrowding, craniofacial hyperostosis & sclerosis, metaphyseal flaring, and high BMD | ( | ||
| AR | Loss of function | Gap junction protein alph‐1 | ||||||
| 151050 | SP | Gain of function | Phosphatidylserine synthase 1 | Phospholipid biosynthesis | Mandible enlargement, generalized hyperostosis, proximal symphalangism, syndactyly, brachydactyly, cutis laxa, developmental delay, hip dislocation, marked hypertelorism, and enamel hypoplasia | ( | ||
MIM®, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man; CN, Cranial Nerve; ICP, Intracranial pressure; BMP, bone morphogenetic protein.
Tori: Oral exostoses which include torus palatinus & mandibularis; found in approximately 25% of a general Caucasian population (146).
Initially known as hyperostosis corticalis generalisata familiaris (116, 117).
A 52-kb intronic deletion downstream of SOST.
LRP5 mutations and associated clinical and radiological characteristics reported to date.
| No. of reported individuals | Amino acid change | Exon | Country | Ethnicity | Tori TP & TM | Mandible | Neurological complications | Fracture History (#) | Clinical Features other than HBM (reported in at least one person in the kindred) | Radiology | Biochemistry | Refs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | p.Gln89Arg | 2 | UK | Caucasian | No | No | Carpel tunnel syndrome | None | Osteoarthritis | NDG | NDG | ( | |
| 1 | p.Asp111Tyr | 2 | Argentina | NDG | NDG | Enlarged mandible. Mandibular pain | Headaches | NDG | Severe headaches, extremity pain | Dense cranium, loss of diploe, enlarged mandible, increased cortical thickness of long bones | NDG | ( | |
| 6 of 15 | p.Arg154Met | 2 | USA from Lithuania | Caucasian | Yes | Enlarged mandible | None | None | Pain in right hip after prolonged standing in the index case | Increased density of calvarium, mandible & endosteal surface of long bones | Calcium, PO4, bALP normal | ( | |
| 2 of 2 | p.G171_E172insGG | 3 | Austria | NDG | No | NDG | Congenital deafness, VII palsy | None | Cochlear implant, migraine. Removal of occipital bone in one individual. Hypergonadotropic hypogonadism. | Increased calvarial and cortical thickness. Foramen magnum stenosis | Osteocalcin normal. CTX normal in mother, raised in daughter | ( | |
| 3 | p.Gly171Arg | 3 | Belgium | NDG | NDG | NDG | Headaches | NDG | Severe headaches in one affected individual | Dense skull bones, cortical thickening of the vertebrae and long bones with normal development | NDG | ( | |
| 1 | g.69547_69552delGGTGAG | 3 | NDG | Caucasian | NDG | Thickened mandible | Hearing impairment. Sudden sight loss aged 16 | None | Generalized bone pain, headaches | Calvarial thickening. Restriction of auditory and optic canals | Calcium, PO4, ALP normal. PTH mildly raised. | ( | |
| 19 of 38 | p.Gly171Val | 3 | USA | Caucasian | NDG | NDG | None | Resistant to # | Asymptomatic | All bones of skeleton radiologically dense, thick cortices, reduced medullary cavity, normal shape | bALP, osteocalcin, deoxy- & pyridinoline X-links normal in subgroup of 5 affected | ( | |
| 7 of 16 | p.Gly171Val | 3 | Connecti-cutUSA | Caucasian | Yes | Wide, deep mandible,decreased mandibular angle | None | None | Asymptomatic other than difficulty floating | Thickened mandibular rami, marked cortical thickening of long bones, dense vertebrae but shape normal | bALP Ca, PO4, PTH, OPG, RANKL, & urinary NTX normal.Osteocalcin, elevated. All in subgroup of 4 affected | ( | |
| 1 | p.Gly171Val | 3 | Colorado USA | NDG | Yes | Wide deep mandible | Strabismus, Bells’ palsy, trigeminal neuralgia, headaches, paraesthesias | NDG | Bone painPseudotumor cerebri, type 1 Chiari malformation | Dense skeleton, marked thickening of skull, and skull base, cortical widening that narrowed medullary cavity of the long bones | bALP and osteocalcin normal | ( | |
| 6 of 13 | p.Gly171Val | 3 | NDG | NDG | TP in all but 1 case | Wide deep mandible | Deafness, sensorimotor neuropathy, dysphonia, spinal stenosis | None | One affected individual required surgery for spinal stenosis, another underwent hip replacement, with difficult surgery attributed to unusual hardness of bone | NDG | NDG | ( | |
| 2 of 2 | p.Gly171Val | 3 | NDG | NDG | Yes | Wide deep mandible | No detail given | None | One individual had hydromyelia (a complication of type 1 Chiari malformation) | NDG | NDG | ( | |
| 1 | p.Thr173Met | 3 | UK | Caucasian | No | No | Ulna nerve decompression | 2 high impact | OsteoarthritisPalpable enthesophyte at tibial tubercle | NDG | NDG | ( | |
| 1 of 4 | p.Asn198Tyr | 3 | NDG | NDG | Yes | NDG | No | None | HBM despite steroids. Ear canal decompression surgery. Headaches, back pain | Severe cortical thickening of cranial and long bones | P1NP increased. Calcium, PO4, ALP, PTH normal | ( | |
| 2 of 6 | p.Asn198Ser | 3 | NDG | NDG | Yes | Wide deep mandible | Deafness, sensorimotor neuropathy, & spinal stenosis | None | NDG | NDG | NDG | ( | |
| 3 | p.Asn198Ser | 3 | UK | Afro-Caribbean | Yes | Enlarged mandible | None | None | Individuals affected differently Chest wall prominence Fixed flexion at elbows Osteotomy of tibial tubercle (for tendonitis)..:. HBM despite steroids | Increased calvarial thickness | Low bone turnover on Alendronic acid | ( | |
| ? | p.Ala214Thr | 3 | Portland USA | NDG | Yes | Elongated mandible | NDG | Resistant to # | Similar phenotype to that described by Boyden et al., 2002. | Increased density of calvarium, mandible and endosteal surface of long bones | NDG | ( | |
| 13 of 24 | p.Ala214Thr | 3 | Holland | NDG | None | Prominent mandible | CN VII palsy in 2 cases | None | Craniosynostosis, developmental delay, tinnitus, headaches, prominent forehead present in >1 member of pedigree | Increased density of calvarium, mandible, pelvis & endosteal surface of long bones | Calcium, PO4, bALP normal | ( | |
| 1 | p.Ala214Val | 3 | UK | NDG | NDG | Enlarged mandible | NDG | NDG | Similar phenotype to that described by Boyden et al., 2002 | Similar to Boyden et al., 2002. | NDG | ( | |
| Family 1:1 of 1Family 2 & 3 unknown | p.Ala242Thr | 4 | Portland USA, & Sardinia | NDG | Yes | Enlarged mandible | None in one case (393). No detail given in 2 families | Resistant to # | NDG | Increased density of calvarium. Mandible and endosteal surfaces of long bones | NDG | ( | |
| ? | p.Ala242Thr | 4 | France | NDG | Yes | Enlarged mandible | NDG | Resistant to # | Osteomyelitis of the jaw, hearing difficulties due to small auditory canals in 2 affected individuals | Increased density of calvarium, enlargement of cranial vault | NDG | ( | |
| 2 of 10 | p.Ala242Thr | 4 | UK | Caucasian | Yes | Enlarged mandible | None | None | Renal calculi (in one individual)Dental overcrowding | NDG | Increased bone turnover at age 21 | ( | |
| 1 | p.Ala242Thr | 4 | UK | Caucasian | Yes | Enlarged mandible | CN V & VII mildly impaired | None | Widespread arthralgia, shin pain & headaches | Increased calvarial thickness with tightly packed brain gyri on MRI. Anterior lumbar syndesmophytes | NDG | ( | |
| 2 | p.Ala242Thr | 4 | UK | Caucasian | Yes | Enlarged mandible | Conductive deafness | None | Osteoarthritis | NDG | NDG | ( | |
| Family 1:13 of 32Family 2:7 of 16 | p.Thr253Ile | 4 | Fyn,Denmark | NDG | NDG | NDG | NDG | No increased # rate | NDG | Generalized sclerosis including calvarium (obliteration of frontal sinuses & mastoids), pelvis & long bones.Enlargement of cranial vault | NDG | ( | |
| 1 | p.Arg266Cys | 4 | UK | Caucasian | Yes | Enlarged mandible | None | None | HBM despite steroids | NDG | Normal bone turnover | ( | |
| 1 | p.Met282Val | 4 | Belgium | NDG | Yes | None | None | NDG | Knee pain, chondrocalcinosis & OA. Cervical spine pain. Developed breast cancer | Thickened skull and long bones on MRI and phalanges on X-ray. Increased density of vertebral bodies without OA | Calcium, PO4, bALP, CTX all normal | ( |
# fracture CN Cranial nerve; TP, torus palitinus; TM, torus mandibularis; bALP, bone specific alkaline phosphatise; PO4, phosphate; PTH, parathyroid hormone; CTX, NTX, C and N-telopeptides cross-links of bone Type I collagen; UK, United Kingdom; NDG, No detail given.
No. of reported individuals (with pedigree size where reported).
3 requiring surgical debulking of TP & TM.
Osteopetrotic conditions and osteosclerotic conditions with disturbed formation and resorption.
| Condition | MIM | Inheritance* | Gene | Mutation | Protein | Function | Symptoms | Ref | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 259700604592 | AR(OPTB1) | Loss of function | T-cell, immune regulator 1, H+ transporting, lysosomal subunit A3 of V-ATPase pump | Acidification of the resorption lacuna | Fractures, infections ( | ( | |||
| 602727611490 | AR (OPTB4) | Loss of function | Chloride Channel | Acidification of the resorption lacuna | |||||
| 259720 607649 | AR (OPTB5) | Loss of function | Osteopetrosis associated transmembrane protein 1 | β-subunit for CLC-7 | |||||
| 615085 | AR (OPTB8) | Loss of function | Sorting Nexin 10 | Acidification of the resorption lacuna | Macrocephaly, broad open fontanelle, frontal bossing, small chin, and splenomegaly, severe optic atrophy with blindness, anemia, thrombocytopenia | ( | |||
| 602642259710 | AR (OPTB2) | Loss of function | Receptor Activator for Nuclear Factor κ B ligand/tumor necrosis factor (ligand) superfamily, member 11 | Osteoclastogenesis, resorption, survival | Osteoclast poor osteopetrosis. Fractures, hydrocephalus, nystagmus, seizures, hypersplenism, less severe course than | ( | |||
| 603499612302 | AR (OPTB7) | Loss of function | Receptor Activator for Nuclear Factor κ B | Osteoclastogenesis, resorption, survival | |||||
| 259710 | AR (OPTA2) | Partial loss of function | Chloride Channel | Acidification of the resorption lacuna | Onset in childhood, fractures, short stature, cranial nerve compression | ( | |||
| 259700, 611497 | AR (OPTB6) | Loss of function | Pleckstrin homology domain containing family M (with RUN domain), member 1 | Vesicular trafficking | Osteopetrosis of the skull only (L2-L4 T-score -2.3). Fractures. Raised osteocalcin | ( | |||
| 259730, 611492 | AR (OPTB3) | Loss of function | Carbonic anhydrase II | Intracellular acidification | Developmental delay, short stature, CN compression, blindness, dental complications, fractures, maintained hemopoietic function. | ( | |||
| 300301 | XL (OLEDAID) | Loss of function | Inhibitor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B-cells kinase gamma (NEMO), | Unknown | Lymphoedema, severe infections, no teeth, skin abnormalities, early death | ( | |||
| 612840 | AR (LAD-3) | Loss of function | Kindlin-3/Fermitin-3 | Cell adhesion | Bacterial infections, bleeding, osteopetrosis, hepatosplenomegaly | ( | |||
| 612840 | AR | Loss of function | Calcium and diaclyglycerol-regulated guanine nucleotide exchange factor 1 | ( | |||||
| 615198 | AR | Loss of function | Leucine-rich repeat kinase 1 | Osteoclast function; sealing zone formation | Developmental delay, seizures, metaphyseal osteosclerosis, diaphyseal osteopenia of long bones. Recurrent fractures. Skull unaffected. | ( | |||
| 166600 | AD (OPTA2) | Dominant negative effect | Chloride Channel | Acidification of the resorption lacuna | Classic radiographic features, fractures, nerve compression, osteomyelitis, dental complications. | ( | |||
| 265800, 601105 | AR | Loss of function | Cathepsin K | Collagen degradation | Delayed cranial suture closure, short stature and phalanges, dental abnormalities, fractures | ( | |||
| 166700 | AD | Loss of function | LEM domain-containing 3 | Disrupted BMP and TGFβ signaling pathways | Benign incidental osteosclerotic foci (can mimic metastases), | ( | |||
| 155950 | AD | Loss of function | LEM domain-containing 3Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Kinase 1SMAD Family Member 3 | Characteristic radiographic features asymmetric ‘flowing hyperostosis’ or ‘dripping candle wax’. Soft tissue changes (hypertrichosis, fibromas, hemangiomas and pain): associated with radiographic features in sclerotome. Contractures can develop | |||||
| 300373 | XL (OSCS) | Loss of function | Wilms tumor gene on the X chromosome/APC Membrane Recruitment Protein 1 | Wnt signaling suppression | Macrocephaly, CN compression, cleft palate, skull/long bone sclerosis in females. Usually lethal in males | ( | |||
| 224300 | AR | Loss of function | Solute carrier family 29 (nucleoside transporter)Colony Stimulating Factor 1 Receptor | Osteoclast differentiation and function | Neurodevelopmental deterioration, platyspondyly, cranial nerve compression, abnormal dentition | ( | |||
| 131300 | AD | Probable gain of function | TGFβ | Cell proliferation, differentiation, migration and apoptosis | Variable phenotype. Thickened diaphyseal cortices, limb pain, fatigability, muscle weakness, waddling gait. Variably raised ALP, hypocalcemia & anemia | ( | |||
| 274180 | AR | Loss of function | Thromboxane synthase | Modulates RANKL & OPG expression | Impaired platelet aggregation (steroid-sensitive), anemia. Similar to Camurati-Engelmann syndrome but metaphyses also involved | ( | |||
| 190320 | AD | Loss of function | Distal‐less homeobox 3 | Ectodermal development | Sparse curly hair, severe dental abnormalities, defective tooth enamel. Sclerosis of calvaria and/or long bones | ( | |||
MIM® Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man CN, Cranial Nerve; RANKL, Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor-Kβ Ligand; OPG, Osteoprotegerin; XL, X-linked; ADOII, Autosomal dominant type 2 osteopetrosis.
ARO incidence is 1/200,000–300,000 live births (193).
As well as an osteoclast poor ARO phenotype, RANK mutations have also been linked to the Paget’s-like diseases (familial expansile osteolysis, expansile skeletal hyperphosphatasia and early-onset Paget’s disease); (230, 231)
When associated with connective tissue naevi, dermatofibrosis lenticularis disseminata then termed Buschke-Ollendorff syndrome (192, 210, 232)
can occur in combination with focal dermal hypoplasia, skin pigmentation, hypoplastic teeth, syndactyly, ocular defects and fat herniation through skin and is known as Goltz Syndrome (233–236).
Also known as progressive diaphyseal dysplasia.