| Literature DB >> 35056706 |
Taeyoung Yang1, So-Young Lee1, Kyung-Chae Park2, Sin-Hyung Park3, Jaiwoo Chung4, Soonchul Lee4.
Abstract
Osteoporosis, characterized by low bone mass and a disruption of bone microarchitecture, is traditionally treated using drugs or lifestyle modifications. Recently, several preclinical and clinical studies have investigated the effects of selenium on bone health, although the results are controversial. Selenium, an important trace element, is required for selenoprotein synthesis and acts crucially for proper growth and skeletal development. However, the intake of an optimum amount of selenium is critical, as both selenium deficiency and toxicity are hazardous for health. In this review, we have systematically analyzed the existing literature in this field to determine whether dietary or serum selenium concentrations are associated with bone health. In addition, the mode of administration of selenium as a supplement for treating bone disease is important. We have also highlighted the importance of using green-synthesized selenium nanoparticles as therapeutics for bone disease. Novel nanobiotechnology will be a bridgehead for clinical applications of trace elements and natural products.Entities:
Keywords: bone formation; bone mineral density; nanoparticles; osteoporosis; selenium; selenoprotein; therapeutics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35056706 PMCID: PMC8780783 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27020392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Selenoprotein classified by cellular function and effects on health [29,61,84,85,86,87,88,89,90].
| Selenoprotein | Subcellular Location | Function | Effect on Health and Disease | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glutathione Peroxidases (GPxs) | ||||
| GPx 1 | Cytoplasm | Antioxidant. | Cardiovascular: CVD, hypertension, peripheral vascular disease, ICH. | [ |
| GPx2 | Cytoplasm | Antioxidant. | ||
| GPx3 | Secreted abundantly | Antioxidant. | Ischemic stroke, differentiated thyroid cancer. | [ |
| GPx4 | Cytoplasm | Antioxidant. | Adenomatous polyps, male infertility. | [ |
| GPx6 | Secreted protein | Cellular H2O2 ↓ in the olfactory epithelium. | - | |
| Iodothyronine Deiodinases (DIOs) | ||||
| DIO1 | Plasma membrane | Regulation of systemic circulating thyroid hormone levels. | Muscle strength, lean body mass. | [ |
| DIO2 | ER membrane | Regulation of local muscular | Type-2 diabetes and insulin resistance. | [ |
| DIO3 | Plasma membrane | Inactivates thyroid hormone. | Osteoporosis and osteoarthritis. | [ |
| Thioredoxin Reductases (TrxRs) | ||||
| TrxR1 | Cytoplasm | Antioxidant. | Advanced colorectal adenoma. | [ |
| TrxR2 | Mitochondrial membrane | Antioxidant. | Gastric cancer. | [ |
| TrxR3 | Cytoplasm | Antioxidant. | - | |
|
Selenoprotein P | Secreted protein | Selenium transport to peripheral tissues. | Prostate cancer, | [ |
|
Selenoprotein M | ER membrane | Protein folding in ER. | Neurological disorders. | |
|
Selenoprotein N | ER membrane | Regulation of muscle development. | Muscle disorders. | [ |
|
Selenoprotein O | Mitochondrial membrane | Possibly involved in redox regulation. | - | |
|
Selenoprotein S | ER membrane | Involved in ER-associated degradation and immune response. | Cardiovascular disease. | [ |
|
Selenoprotein T | ER membrane | Involved in redox regulation and cell anchorage. | - | |
|
Selenoprotein V | Unclear | Unknown. | - | |
| Selenophosphate synthetase 2 (SEPHS2) | Nucleoplasm | Synthesis of selenophosphate. | - | |
|
MSRB1 | Cytoplasm | Antioxidant. | Cardiovascular diseases. | |
|
Selenoprotein W | ER membrane | Antioxidant. | Muscle disorders, neurological disorders. | |
|
Selenoprotein H | Nucleoplasm and nucleoli | Antioxidant. | Neurological disorders. | |
|
Selenoprotein I | Plasma membrane | Involved in phospholipid biosynthesis. | - | |
|
Selenoprotein F | ER membrane | Involved in protein folding. | Cancer: Prostate cancer, lung cancer, and rectal cancer. | [ |
|
Selenoprotein K | ER membrane | Modulates calcium metabolism. | - | |
Abbreviations: ER: endoplasmic reticulum; MSRB1: methionine sulfoxide reductase B1; H2O2: hydrogen peroxide; BAT: brown adipose tissue; ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage; ↓: reduced or decreased.
Figure 1Mechanism of selenium-related bone metabolism. Selenium supplement encourages the activity of GPx and TrxR, and GPx activity is more activated in those with a selenium-deficient status. GPx and TrxR suppress NFκB activation at supranutritional selenium levels and regulate osteoclastogenesis and osteoblastogenesis. Co-treatment of 1α,25(OH)2D3 and selenium synergistically elevates TrxR1 protein and activity. GPxs: glutathione peroxidases; TrxRs: thioredoxin reductases; RANK: receptor activator of NFκB; RANKL: receptor activator of NFκB ligand.
Effects of selenium on bone health in in vivo studies.
| Author, Year | Study Design | Animal Model | Intervention | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turan et al. | Assigned to 4 groups: | New Zealand white rabbits | Normal Se diet, 0.5 mg/kg; | GPx activity ↑ or ↓: plasma selenium level ↑ or ↓. |
| Moreno-R et al. | Assigned to | Wistar rats | Se-deficient diet, 0.005 mg/kg; | Weight and tail length ↓. |
| Turan et al. | 1000 IU/kg/day heparin | New Zealand white rabbits | Se diet, 0.05 mg/kg/day. | Combination of vitamins E and C with selenium prevented structural alterations in the long bones in an osteoporosis model. |
| Ren et al. | Assigned to 4 groups: | Sprague-Dawley rats | Se-deficient diet, <0.02 μg/g; | Tibial length, the thickness of the growth plate cartilage ↓ in Se- and iodine-deficient rats. |
| Cao et al. | Assigned to 3 groups: | C57BL/6J mice | Se-deficient diet, 0.9 μg Se/kg; | In selenium-deficient group: GPx1 activity and GPx1 mRNA in liver ↓. |
| Yao et al. | Assigned to 4 groups: | Wistar rats | KBD Se diet, 0.031 mg/kg; | Selenium supplement group and selenium plus iodine group: bone volume/tissue volume ratio (BV/TV), trabecular thickness, trabecular number ↑, trabecular separation ↓. |
| Min et al. | Assigned to 2 groups: | Dark Agouti | Se-sufficient diet, 0.288 μg/g; | In two generations of rats, gene expressions of COL II, GPx1, and GPx4 ↓ in Se-sufficient rats. |
Abbreviations: SeMet: Selenomethionine; SeBean: seleno pinto beans; Se: selenium; TRAP: tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase; KBD: Kashin-Beck disease; 1,25(OH)2D3: 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3; PTH: parathyroid hormone; Gpx: glutathione peroxidase; BMD: bone mineral density; PTHrP: parathyroid hormone-related peptide; COL II: type II collagen; ColX: type X collagen; ↑ indicates increase or upregulation; ↓ indicates decrease or downregulation; ↔ indicates no change.
Studies on blood selenium level and bone health.
| Author, Year | Setting/ | Country | Number of Subjects | Case/Control | Outcomes Considered | Results | +/- | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Odabasi et al. | Case–control study | Turkey | 138 | Osteoporosis ( | Se (ng/mL): 76.98 | Trace element. | No significant difference between the osteoporosis and control group. | - |
| Arikan et al. | Case–control study | Turkey | 107 | Osteoporosis ( | Se (μg/L): 66.16 ± 12.1 | Trace element. | No significant differences between the osteoporosis, osteopenia, and healthy groups. | - |
| Hoeg et al. | Population-based cohort study | Europe | 1144 | Mean Se: 94.3 (μg/L) | Se, SePP, TFT, bone turnover markers (OC, PINP, uNTX to Cr). | Se and SePP statuses were inversely related to bone turnover markers. | + | |
| Beukhof et al. | Population-based cross-sectional study | The Netherlands | 387 | Mean Se (μg/L): 91.9 | Se, SePP. | Se and SePP statuses were positively associated with total BMD and femoral trochanter BMD. | + | |
| Marta et al. | Cross-sectional, population-based cohort study | Spain | 1365 | Low BMD | Se level: 82.8 μg/L | Se, As, and Cd. | Calcaneus BMD had non-linear dose–response; inverse below 105 μg/L | + |
| Al-E-Ahmad et al. | Case–control study | Iran | 180 | Osteoporosis ( | Se (μg/L): 57.58 ± 25.5 | ALOX12 SNPs. | Se level was different among groups | + |
| Liu et al. | Cross-sectional study | China | 290 | Osteoporosis ( | Se (mg/L): 0.067 ± 0.02 | Serum macro-element and trace element. | No significant differences between the osteoporosis, osteopenia, and healthy groups. | - |
| Wang et al. | Case–control study | China | 91 | Osteoporosis ( | Se (ppb): 125.53 ± 22.8 | Trace element. | No significant differences between the osteoporosis, osteopenia, and healthy groups. | - |
| Park et al. | Cross-sectional study | Korea | 1167 | Low BMD group | Se level: 0.05 μg/g | Hair Se. | Lower Se levels were associated with low BMD. | + |
Abbreviations: BMD: bone mineral density; DXA: dual energy X-ray absorptiometry; Se: selenium; SePP: selenoprotein P; TFT: thyroid hormone test; PINP: procollagentype I N-terminal propeptide; OC: osteocalcin; uNTX to Cr: urinary resorption marker N-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen to creatine; SNPs: single nucleotide polymorphisms; OPUS study: Osteoporosis and Ultrasound Study; + means positive correlation with bone health; - means no significant correlation.
Studies on selenium intake and bone health.
| Author, Year | Study Design | Country | Number of | Diet Assessment | Outcome Considered | Selenium Intake/Selenium Status | Results | +/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wolf et al. | Population-based cross-sectional study | USA, | 11,068 | Semi-quantitative FFQ | Intakes of antioxidants with total BMD | Antioxidant diet group Se: 85.9 ± 38.6 μg/d. | Selenium had no association with BMD after multiple adjustments. | - |
| Zhang et al. | Population-based case–control study | USA, | 1215 | 137-item FFQ | Intakes of antioxidants with | Quintile of antioxidant intake of Se: 58, 79, 99, 121, 162 μg/d. | Selenium was associated with reduced risk of osteoporotic hip fracture. | + |
| Wu et al. | Cross-sectional, population-based cohort study | USA | 2983 | 2-day food records | Whole blood and serum Se with FN, LS BMD, and FRAX score | Mean dietary selenium intake: 101.5 μg/day. | Increased Se status is correlated with an increased FN BMD, decreased FRAX scores, and reduced incidence of previous bone fracture history. | + |
| Ilich et al. | Cross-sectional study | Croatia | 120 | 3-day food records | Hip and LS BMD | Control group: 104.0 ± 27.1 μg/d. | There was no correlation between selenium deficiency and BMD. | - |
| Rivas et al. | Cross-sectional study | Spain | 280 | 24-hr diet recall FFQ | Dietary antioxidants with calcaneous BMD | 18–35 yr group: Se: 60.21 μg/d. | Positive association was | + |
| P-Z et al. | Cross-sectional | Spain | 335 postmenopausal women | 7-day food records | Se and calcium intake status with Ad-SoS at the phalanges | Mean Se intake: 95.5 μg/d. | Elevated selenium intake negatively affected bone mass Ad-SOS score only in low calcium intake group. | + |
| Chan et al. | Cross-sectional study | China | 441 | 5-day food records | Dietary intake with hip, FN, and LS BMD | Honkong Se: 80.6 ± 27.2 μg/d. | Beijing had lower selenium intake. | - |
| Sun et al. | Case–control study | China | 726 hip fracture | Semi-quantitative FFQ | Dietart intake of antioxidant with hip fracture | Cases: Men: 43.5; Women: 40.8 (μg/d). | Higher dietary intake of Se associated with a lower risk of hip fracture. | + |
| Wang, Y. et al. | Cross-sectional study | China | 6267 | Validated semi-quantitative FFQ | BMD at the phalanges | OP: 39.1 ± 31.1 μg/d. | Lower levels of dietary Se intake associated with a higher prevalence of osteoporosis. | + |
| Zhang et al. | Longitudinal study | China | 17,150 | 3-day food records | Self-reported history of fracture | Selenium intake quartile: | Non-linear association between selenium intake and fracture. | + |
Abbreviations: BMD: bone mineral density; DXA: dual energy X-ray absorptiometry; FFQ: food frequency questionnaire; LS: lumbar spine; FN: femoral neck; Se: selenium; SePP: selenoprotein P; OP: osteoporosis; FRAX: Fracture Risk Assessment Tool; Ad-SoS: amplitude-dependent speed of sound; + means positive correlation with bone health; - means no significant correlation.
Selenium supplementation trials in humans with osteoporosis.
| Author, Year | Study Design | Study Population (Treated/Placebo) | Intervention Se Supplement | Intervention Duration and | Primary Outcomes | Secondary Outcomes | Results | +/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walsh et al. | 6-month randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | 120 | 1:1:1 randomized trial; received 200 μg, 50 μg, or placebo per day of sodium selenite. | 26 weeks/ | uNTX to Cr. | Serum Se SePP, BMD, other BTM, muscle function antioxidant, and inflammatory markers. | Urine NTx to creatinine ratio did not differ significantly between treatment groups at 26 weeks. | - |
| Perri et al. | Single-center, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, multi-arm, parallel clinical trial | 490 | 1:1:1:1 Randomized 100, 200, 300 μg or placebo per day of selenium yeast | 6 Month/ | Bone turnover markers, | Serum Se, | Selenium supplementation reduced P1NP at 6 months, but there were no significant effects on other BTM or after 5 years. | - |
Abbreviations: BMD: bone mineral density; DXA: dual energy X-ray absorptiometry; Se: selenium; SePP: selenoprotein P; PINP: procollagen type I N-terminal propeptide; OC: osteocalcin; uNTX to Cr: urinary resorption marker N-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen to creatine; BTM: bone turnover markers; - means no significant correlation with bone health.