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Publication : T cells potentiate PTH-induced cortical bone loss through CD40L signaling.

First Author  Gao Y Year  2008
Journal  Cell Metab Volume  8
Issue  2 Pages  132-45
PubMed ID  18680714 Mgi Jnum  J:140132
Mgi Id  MGI:3811972 Doi  10.1016/j.cmet.2008.07.001
Citation  Gao Y, et al. (2008) T cells potentiate PTH-induced cortical bone loss through CD40L signaling. Cell Metab 8(2):132-45
abstractText  Parathyroid hormone (PTH) promotes bone catabolism by targeting bone marrow (BM) stromal cells (SCs) and their osteoblastic progeny. Here we show that a continuous infusion of PTH that mimics hyperparathyroidism fails to induce osteoclast formation, bone resorption, and cortical bone loss in mice lacking T cells. T cells provide proliferative and survival cues to SCs and sensitize SCs to PTH through CD40 ligand (CD40L), a surface molecule of activated T cells that induces CD40 signaling in SCs. As a result, deletion of T cells or T cell-expressed CD40L blunts the bone catabolic activity of PTH by decreasing bone marrow SC number, the receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappaB ligand (RANKL)/OSTEOPROTEGERN (OPG) ratio, and osteoclastogenic activity. Therefore, T cells play an essential permissive role in hyperparathyroidism as they influence SC proliferation, life span, and function through CD40L. T cell-SC crosstalk pathways may thus provide pharmacological targets for PTH-induced bone disease.
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