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Publication : Skeletal changes during lactation and after weaning in osteocyte-specific sclerostin overexpressed mice.

First Author  Lee SJ Year  2020
Journal  J Bone Miner Metab Volume  38
Issue  2 Pages  172-178
PubMed ID  31501981 Mgi Jnum  J:293622
Mgi Id  MGI:6453371 Doi  10.1007/s00774-019-01044-6
Citation  Lee SJ, et al. (2020) Skeletal changes during lactation and after weaning in osteocyte-specific sclerostin overexpressed mice. J Bone Miner Metab 38(2):172-178
abstractText  INTRODUCTION: Lactation inevitably leads to a state of rapid bone loss; however, maternal bone undergoes rapid remineralization after weaning. Sclerostin, encoded by the gene SOST, is exclusively secreted from osteocytes and plays important roles in bone remodeling. However, there are few studies about the effect of sclerostin during lactation and weaning on bone microstructures. Therefore, we conducted the study to demonstrate any possible association of sclerostin with bone metabolism and skeletal changes during lactation and after weaning. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We analyzed bone mineral density (BMD) by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry at the spine and femur, bone microstructure by micro-computed tomography (muCT) at the distal and mid-shaft of the femur and biochemical markers such as sclerostin and bone turnover markers at 1 week and 3 weeks of lactation and 2 weeks post-weaning in osteocyte-specific sclerostin-overexpressed transgenic mice, and compared them with wild type. RESULTS: Lactation significantly resulted in decreased spine and femur BMD at day 7 and day 21 of breastfeeding; specifically, cortical microstructure (cross-sectional thickness and cross-sectional area) at the mid-shaft of the femur had significantly deteriorated. At day 14 after weaning, femur BMD and cortical microstructure at the mid-shaft of the femur in both the wild and DMP-SOST mice had incompletely recovered; however, spine BMD and trabecular microstructures at the distal femur recovered in wild type mice. CONCLUSIONS: Sclerostin, secreted by osteocytes, played a role in bone loss during lactation and also in the recovery of trabecular bone compartment by activating bone formation after weaning.
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