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Publication : Vinculin regulates osteoclast function.

First Author  Fukunaga T Year  2014
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  289
Issue  19 Pages  13554-64
PubMed ID  24675074 Mgi Jnum  J:214132
Mgi Id  MGI:5588093 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M114.550731
Citation  Fukunaga T, et al. (2014) Vinculin regulates osteoclast function. J Biol Chem 289(19):13554-64
abstractText  Osteoclastic bone resorption depends upon the cell's ability to organize its cytoskeleton. Because vinculin (VCL) is an actin-binding protein, we asked whether it participates in skeletal degradation. Thus, we mated VCL(fl/fl) mice with those expressing cathepsin K-Cre (CtsK-VCL) to delete the gene in mature osteoclasts or lysozyme M-Cre (LysM-VCL) to target all osteoclast lineage cells. VCL-deficient osteoclasts differentiate normally but, reflecting cytoskeletal disorganization, form small actin rings and fail to effectively resorb bone. In keeping with inhibited resorptive function, CtsK-VCL and LysM-VCL mice exhibit a doubling of bone mass. Despite cytoskeletal disorganization, the capacity of VCL(-/-) osteoclastic cells to normally phosphorylate c-Src in response to alphavbeta3 integrin ligand is intact. Thus, integrin-activated signals are unrelated to the means by which VCL organizes the osteoclast cytoskeleton. WT VCL completely rescues actin ring formation and bone resorption, as does VCL(P878A), which is incapable of interacting with Arp2/3. As expected, deletion of the VCL tail domain (VCL(1-880)), which binds actin, does not normalize VCL(-/-) osteoclasts. The same is true regarding VCL(I997A), which also prevents VCL/actin binding, and VCL(A50I) and VCL(811-1066), both of which arrest talin association. Thus, VCL binding talin, but not Arp2/3, is critical for osteoclast function, and its selective inhibition retards physiological bone loss.
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