| Literature DB >> 33982033 |
L Shannon Holliday1,2, Shivani S Patel1, Wellington J Rody3.
Abstract
Receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B-ligand (RANKL), its receptor RANK, and osteoprotegerin which binds RANKL and acts as a soluble decoy receptor, are essential controllers of bone remodeling. They also play important roles in establishing immune tolerance and in the development of the lymphatic system and mammary glands. In bone, RANKL stimulates osteoclast formation by binding RANK on osteoclast precursors and osteoclasts. This is required for bone resorption. Recently, RANKL and RANK have been shown to be functional components of extracellular vesicles (EVs). Data linking RANKL and RANK in EVs to biological regulatory roles are reviewed, and crucial unanswered questions are examined. RANKL and RANK are transmembrane proteins and their presence in EVs allows them to act at a distance from their cell of origin. Because RANKL-bearing osteocytes and osteoblasts are often spatially distant from RANK-containing osteoclasts in vivo, this may be crucial for the stimulation of osteoclast formation and bone resorption. RANK in EVs from osteoclasts has the capacity to stimulate a RANKL reverse signaling pathway in osteoblasts that promotes bone formation. This serves to couple bone resorption with bone formation and has inspired novel bifunctional therapeutic agents. RANKL- and RANK- containing EVs in serum may serve as biomarkers for bone and immune pathologies. In summary, EVs containing RANKL and RANK have been identified as intercellular regulators in bone biology. They add complexity to the central signaling network responsible for maintaining bone. RANKL- and RANK-containing EVs are attractive as drug targets and as biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: Cell signaling; apoptotic vesicle; coupling factor; exosome; microvesicle; osteoblast; osteoclast; osteocyte
Year: 2021 PMID: 33982033 PMCID: PMC8112638 DOI: 10.20517/evcna.2020.02
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Extracell Vesicles Circ Nucl Acids
Figure 1.Extracellular vesicles containing RANKL or RANK add increased complexity to the RANKL/RANK/osteoprotegerin signaling network that is at the core of bone biology. Until recently, RANKL stimulation of RANK to stimulate osteoclast formation and bone resorption by osteoclasts, and the ability of osteoprotegerin to bind RANKL and competitively inhibit this signaling, were considered the primary features of this network. Now data suggest that RANKL EVs can stimulate osteoclast formation and bone resorption through RANK stimulation, and RANK-EVs bind to RANKL on osteoblasts to stimulate RANKL reverse signaling and bone formation. The latter serves to couple bone resorption and bone formation. It is also possible that RANK-EVs can bind RANKL or RANKL-EVs and competitively inhibit their stimulation of RANK on osteoclasts. RANKL-EVs could serve as competitive inhibitors of RANK-EV’s stimulation of RANKL reverse signaling.
Figure 2.Regulation of RANK-containing EV production. We hypothesize that when RANK is internalized, an element of the normal receptor life cycle, it can either be recycled back to the plasma membrane, where it would be available for continued stimulation by RANKL. This would favor bone resorption. Alternatively, it could be sorted into a retrograde pathway that could lead to the Golgi for reuse of RANK, to the lysosome for degradation, or to multivesicular bodies, some of which would fuse with the plasma membrane and release RANK-EVs. All the retrograde pathways would remove RANK from the plasma membrane surface, and thus reduce stimulation by RANKL. In addition, shedding of RANK-EVs would also stimulate the RANKL reverse pathway and bone formation. If this idea is correct, shifts in the sorting of RANK could have profound effects on both bone resorption and bone formation, and understanding the underlying mechanisms may identify new strategies for treating bone disease.