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Publication : Mechanosensing by the primary cilium: deletion of Kif3A reduces bone formation due to loading.

First Author  Temiyasathit S Year  2012
Journal  PLoS One Volume  7
Issue  3 Pages  e33368
PubMed ID  22428034 Mgi Jnum  J:224125
Mgi Id  MGI:5661294 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0033368
Citation  Temiyasathit S, et al. (2012) Mechanosensing by the primary cilium: deletion of Kif3A reduces bone formation due to loading. PLoS One 7(3):e33368
abstractText  Primary cilia, solitary microtubule-based structures that grow from the centriole and extend into the extracellular space, have increasingly been implicated as sensors of a variety of biochemical and biophysical signals. Mutations in primary cilium-related genes have been linked to a number of rare developmental disorders as well as dysregulation of cell proliferation. We propose that primary cilia are also important in mechanically regulated bone formation in adults and that their malfunction could play a role in complex multi-factorial bone diseases, such as osteoporosis. In this study, we generated mice with an osteoblast- and osteocyte-specific knockout of Kif3a, a subunit of the kinesin II intraflagellar transport (IFT) protein; IFT is required for primary cilia formation, maintenance, and function. These Colalpha1(I) 2.3-Cre;Kif3a(fl/fl) mice exhibited no obvious morphological skeletal abnormalities. Skeletally mature Colalpha1(I) 2.3-Cre;Kif3a(fl/fl) and control mice were exposed to 3 consecutive days of cyclic axial ulna loading, which resulted in a significant increase in bone formation in both the conditional knockouts and controls. However, Colalpha1(I) 2.3-Cre;Kif3a(fl/fl) mice did exhibit decreased formation of new bone in response to mechanical ulnar loading compared to control mice. These results suggest that primary cilia act as cellular mechanosensors in bone and that their function may be critical for the regulation of bone physiology due to mechanical loading in adults.
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