| Literature DB >> 33330462 |
Sukanya Suresh1, Jeeyoung Lee1, Constance Tom Noguchi1.
Abstract
Erythropoietin (EPO) is expressed primarily in fetal liver and adult kidney to stimulate red blood cell production. Erythropoietin receptor expression is not restricted to erythroid progenitor cells, and non-erythroid EPO activity includes immune response and bone remodeling. In bone fracture models, EPO administration promotes bone formation and accelerates bone healing. In contrast, in healthy adult mice, exogenous EPO-stimulated erythropoiesis has been concomitant with bone loss, particularly at high EPO, that may be accompanied by increased osteoclast activation. Other EPO-associated responses include reduced inflammation and loss of fat mass with high-fat diet feeding, especially in male mice. While EPO exhibited a sex-dimorphic response in regulation of fat mass and inflammation in obese mice, EPO-stimulated erythropoiesis as well as EPO-associated bone loss was comparable in males and females. EPO administration in young mice and in obese mice resulted in bone loss without increasing osteoclasts, suggesting an osteoclast-independent mechanism, while loss of endogenous EPO decreased bone development and maintenance. Ossicle formation of bone marrow stromal cell transplants showed that EPO directly regulates the balance between osteogenesis and adipogenesis. Therefore, during development, endogenous EPO contributes to normal bone development and in maintaining the balance between osteogenesis and adipogenesis in bone marrow stromal cells, while EPO treatment in mice increased erythropoiesis, promoted bone loss, decreased bone marrow adipogenesis, and increased osteoclast activity. These observations in mouse models suggest that the most prevalent use of EPO to treat anemia associated with chronic kidney disease may compromise bone health and increase fracture risk, especially at a high dose.Entities:
Keywords: bone; brain; erythropoietin; fat; macrophage; microglial; osteoblast; osteoclast
Year: 2020 PMID: 33330462 PMCID: PMC7732496 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.584696
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Effects of erythropoietin in the bone in vivo.
| Type | Genetic background | Bone phenotype | Mechanism | References |
| Tg6 | Overexpression of human EPO driven by PDGF-β promoter, males and females | Trabecular bone loss, thin cortical bone, decreased marrow adiposity – femora | Increased bone resorption and reduced bone formation rate | |
| ΔEpoRE | Epor−/− mice rescued by erythroid restricted EPOR transgene (GATA-1 locus hematopoietic regulatory domain driving mouse EPOR cDNA), males and females | Reduced trabecular bone, cortical bone unaffected, increased marrow adiposity – femora | Increased bone resorption with age; reduced osteogenic potential of osteoblasts | |
| Mice with EPOR deletion in osteoblasts | Mice generated by crossing Osteocalcin (Bglap)-Cre mice with Eporfloxp/floxp mice, males and females | Reduced trabecular bone, cortical bone, and marrow adiposity unaffected – femora | No change in bone resorption; reduced osteogenic potential of osteoblasts; reduced osteocytes and increased empty lacunae | |
| Wild-type mice | C57BL6 strain, female | Trabecular bone loss – femora | Increased bone resorption | |
| Wild-type mice | C57BL6 strain, male | Trabecular bone loss – tibiae | Increase in both bone resorption and bone formation | |
| Wild-type mice | C57BL6 strain, gender unknown | Increased bone mineral density and bone volume – vertebrae | Increased osteoblasts on bone surface | |
| ΔEpoRE | C57BL6 background, females | No changes in trabecular or cortical bone – femora | No changes in osteoblasts or osteoclasts | |
| Mice with EPOR deletion in osteoblasts | C57BL6 background, males and females | Non-significant reduction in trabecular bone in males, intact trabecular bone in females, cortical bone unaffected in both males and females – femora | No changes in osteoblasts or osteoclasts | |
FIGURE 1Effects of erythropoietin in the bone and the bone marrow compartment. 1. Endogenous EPO regulates bone marrow stromal cell differentiation to adipocytes and osteoblasts. 2. Increased EPO decreases bone marrow adipocytes. 3. EPO directly regulates osteoblast differentiation; the absence of EPO signaling in osteoblasts reduces their differentiation potential. Elevated EPO has a dose-dependent effect on osteoblasts, with low-dose EPO reducing differentiation and high-dose EPO increasing differentiation. 4. Absence of EPO signaling in mature osteoblasts reduces osteocytes, resulting in empty lacunae. 5. High EPO stimulates differentiation of preosteoclasts into osteoclasts. 6. EPO stimulates hematopoietic stem cells which, in turn, promotes both osteoblast and osteoclast differentiation.