|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Suppression of autophagy in osteocytes does not modify the adverse effects of glucocorticoids on cortical bone.

First Author  Piemontese M Year  2015
Journal  Bone Volume  75
Pages  18-26 PubMed ID  25700544
Mgi Jnum  J:221967 Mgi Id  MGI:5643804
Doi  10.1016/j.bone.2015.02.005 Citation  Piemontese M, et al. (2015) Suppression of autophagy in osteocytes does not modify the adverse effects of glucocorticoids on cortical bone. Bone 75:18-26
abstractText  Glucocorticoid excess decreases bone mass and strength in part by acting directly on osteoblasts and osteocytes, but the mechanisms remain unclear. Macroautophagy (herein referred to as autophagy) is a lysosome-based recycling pathway that promotes the turnover of intracellular components and can promote cell function and survival under stressful conditions. Recent studies have shown that glucocorticoids stimulate autophagy in osteocytes, suggesting that autophagy may oppose the negative actions of glucocorticoids on this cell type. To address this possibility, we compared the impact of prednisolone administration on the skeletons of adult mice in which autophagy was suppressed in osteocytes, via deletion of Atg7 with a Dmp1-Cre transgene, to their control littermates. In control mice, prednisolone increased autophagic flux in osteocyte-enriched bone as measured by LC3 conversion, but this change did not occur in the mice lacking Atg7 in osteocytes. Nonetheless, prednisolone reduced femoral cortical thickness, increased cortical porosity, and reduced bone strength to similar extents in mice with and without autophagy in osteocytes. Prednisolone also suppressed osteoblast number and bone formation in the cancellous bone of control mice. As shown previously, Atg7 deletion in osteocytes reduced osteoblast number and bone formation in cancellous bone, but these parameters were not further reduced by prednisolone administration. In cortical bone, prednisolone elevated osteoclast number to a similar extent in both genotypes. Taken together, these results demonstrate that although glucocorticoids stimulate autophagy in osteocytes, suppression of autophagy in this cell type does not worsen the negative impact of glucocorticoids on the skeleton.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

6 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression