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Publication : Protein kinase Cα (PKCα) regulates bone architecture and osteoblast activity.

First Author  Galea GL Year  2014
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  289
Issue  37 Pages  25509-22
PubMed ID  25070889 Mgi Jnum  J:233224
Mgi Id  MGI:5781020 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M114.580365
Citation  Galea GL, et al. (2014) Protein kinase Calpha (PKCalpha) regulates bone architecture and osteoblast activity. J Biol Chem 289(37):25509-22
abstractText  Bones' strength is achieved and maintained through adaptation to load bearing. The role of the protein kinase PKCalpha in this process has not been previously reported. However, we observed a phenotype in the long bones of Prkca(-/-) female but not male mice, in which bone tissue progressively invades the medullary cavity in the mid-diaphysis. This bone deposition progresses with age and is prevented by disuse but unaffected by ovariectomy. Castration of male Prkca(-/-) but not WT mice results in the formation of small amounts of intramedullary bone. Osteoblast differentiation markers and Wnt target gene expression were up-regulated in osteoblast-like cells derived from cortical bone of female Prkca(-/-) mice compared with WT. Additionally, although osteoblastic cells derived from WT proliferate following exposure to estradiol or mechanical strain, those from Prkca(-/-) mice do not. Female Prkca(-/-) mice develop splenomegaly and reduced marrow GBA1 expression reminiscent of Gaucher disease, in which PKC involvement has been suggested previously. From these data, we infer that in female mice, PKCalpha normally serves to prevent endosteal bone formation stimulated by load bearing. This phenotype appears to be suppressed by testicular hormones in male Prkca(-/-) mice. Within osteoblastic cells, PKCalpha enhances proliferation and suppresses differentiation, and this regulation involves the Wnt pathway. These findings implicate PKCalpha as a target gene for therapeutic approaches in low bone mass conditions.
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