Literature DB >> 9383681

Increased adipogenesis and myelopoiesis in the bone marrow of SAMP6, a murine model of defective osteoblastogenesis and low turnover osteopenia.

O Kajkenova1, B Lecka-Czernik, I Gubrij, S P Hauser, K Takahashi, A M Parfitt, R L Jilka, S C Manolagas, D A Lipschitz.   

Abstract

Bone formation and hematopoiesis are anatomically juxtaposed and share common regulatory mechanisms. However, little is known about the interrelationship between these two processes. We have previously shown that the senescence accelerated mouse-P6 (SAMP6) exhibits decreased osteoblastogenesis in the bone marrow that is temporally linked with a low rate of bone formation and decreased bone mineral density. Here we report that in contrast to decreased osteoblastogenesis, ex vivo bone marrow cultures from SAMP6 mice exhibited an increase in the number of colony-forming unit adipocytes, as well as an increase in the number of fully differentiated marrow adipocytes, compared with SAMR1 (nonosteopenic) controls. Further, long-term bone marrow cultures from SAMP6 produced an adherent stromal layer more rapidly, generated significantly more myeloid progenitors and produced more IL-6 and colony-stimulating activity. Consistent with this, the number of myeloid cells in freshly isolated marrow from SAMP6 mice was increased, as was the number of granulocytes in peripheral blood. The evidence that SAMP6 mice exhibit decreased osteoblastogenesis, and increased adipogenesis and myelopoiesis, strongly suggests that a switch in the differentiation program of multipotential mesenchymal progenitors may underlie the abnormal phenotype manifested in the skeleton and other tissues of these animals. Moreover, these observations support the contention for the existence of a reciprocal relationship between osteoblastogenesis and adipogenesis that may explain the association of decreased bone formation and the resulting osteopenia with the increased adiposity of the marrow seen with advancing age in animals and humans.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9383681     DOI: 10.1359/jbmr.1997.12.11.1772

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Miner Res        ISSN: 0884-0431            Impact factor:   6.741


  57 in total

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