Loss of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 in Leptin Receptor‐Expressing Stromal Cells Attenuates Loading‐Induced Endosteal Bone Formation

ABSTRACT Bone marrow stromal/stem cells represent a quiescent cell population that replenish the osteoblast bone‐forming cell pool with age and in response to injury, maintaining bone mass and repair. A potent mediator of stromal/stem cell differentiation in vitro and bone formation in vivo is physi...

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Main Authors: Mathieu Riffault, Gillian P Johnson, Madeline M Owen, Behzad Javaheri, Andrew A Pitsillides, David A Hoey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-11-01
Series:JBMR Plus
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm4.10408
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spelling doaj-17efbc894f7c4a03b6a40943649b3eda2021-05-02T23:32:58ZengWileyJBMR Plus2473-40392020-11-01411n/an/a10.1002/jbm4.10408Loss of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 in Leptin Receptor‐Expressing Stromal Cells Attenuates Loading‐Induced Endosteal Bone FormationMathieu Riffault0Gillian P Johnson1Madeline M Owen2Behzad Javaheri3Andrew A Pitsillides4David A Hoey5Trinity Centre for Biomedical Engineering Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, Trinity College Dublin Dublin IrelandTrinity Centre for Biomedical Engineering Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, Trinity College Dublin Dublin IrelandTrinity Centre for Biomedical Engineering Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, Trinity College Dublin Dublin IrelandSkeletal Biology Group, Comparative Biomedical Sciences The Royal Veterinary College London United KingdomSkeletal Biology Group, Comparative Biomedical Sciences The Royal Veterinary College London United KingdomTrinity Centre for Biomedical Engineering Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, Trinity College Dublin Dublin IrelandABSTRACT Bone marrow stromal/stem cells represent a quiescent cell population that replenish the osteoblast bone‐forming cell pool with age and in response to injury, maintaining bone mass and repair. A potent mediator of stromal/stem cell differentiation in vitro and bone formation in vivo is physical loading, yet it still remains unclear whether loading‐induced bone formation requires the osteogenic differentiation of these resident stromal/stem cells. Therefore, in this study, we utilized the leptin receptor (LepR) to identify and trace the contribution of bone marrow stromal cells to mechanoadaptation of bone in vivo. Twelve‐week‐old Lepr‐cre;tdTomato mice were subjected to compressive tibia loading with an 11 N peak load for 40 cycles, every other day for 2 weeks. Histological analysis revealed that Lepr‐cre;tdTomato+ cells arise perinatally around blood vessels and populate bone surfaces as lining cells or osteoblasts before a percentage undergo osteocytogenesis. Lepr‐cre;tdTomato+ stromal cells within the marrow increase in abundance with age, but not following the application of tibial compressive loading. Mechanical loading induces an increase in bone mass and bone formation parameters, yet does not evoke an increase in Lepr‐cre;tdTomato+ osteoblasts or osteocytes. To investigate whether adenylyl cyclase‐6 (AC6) in LepR cells contributes to this mechanoadaptive response, Lepr‐cre;tdTomato mice were further crossed with AC6fl/fl mice to generate a LepR+ cell‐specific knockout of AC6. These Lepr‐cre;tdTomato;AC6fl/fl animals have an attenuated response to compressive tibia loading, characterized by a deficient load‐induced osteogenic response on the endosteal bone surface. This, therefore, shows that Lepr‐cre;tdTomato+ cells contribute to short‐term bone mechanoadaptation. © 2020 The Authors. JBMR Plus published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm4.10408ADENYLYL CYCLASE 6BONE ADAPTATIONIN VIVO MECHANICAL LOADINGMECHANOBIOLOGYSTEM CELLS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mathieu Riffault
Gillian P Johnson
Madeline M Owen
Behzad Javaheri
Andrew A Pitsillides
David A Hoey
spellingShingle Mathieu Riffault
Gillian P Johnson
Madeline M Owen
Behzad Javaheri
Andrew A Pitsillides
David A Hoey
Loss of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 in Leptin Receptor‐Expressing Stromal Cells Attenuates Loading‐Induced Endosteal Bone Formation
JBMR Plus
ADENYLYL CYCLASE 6
BONE ADAPTATION
IN VIVO MECHANICAL LOADING
MECHANOBIOLOGY
STEM CELLS
author_facet Mathieu Riffault
Gillian P Johnson
Madeline M Owen
Behzad Javaheri
Andrew A Pitsillides
David A Hoey
author_sort Mathieu Riffault
title Loss of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 in Leptin Receptor‐Expressing Stromal Cells Attenuates Loading‐Induced Endosteal Bone Formation
title_short Loss of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 in Leptin Receptor‐Expressing Stromal Cells Attenuates Loading‐Induced Endosteal Bone Formation
title_full Loss of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 in Leptin Receptor‐Expressing Stromal Cells Attenuates Loading‐Induced Endosteal Bone Formation
title_fullStr Loss of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 in Leptin Receptor‐Expressing Stromal Cells Attenuates Loading‐Induced Endosteal Bone Formation
title_full_unstemmed Loss of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 in Leptin Receptor‐Expressing Stromal Cells Attenuates Loading‐Induced Endosteal Bone Formation
title_sort loss of adenylyl cyclase 6 in leptin receptor‐expressing stromal cells attenuates loading‐induced endosteal bone formation
publisher Wiley
series JBMR Plus
issn 2473-4039
publishDate 2020-11-01
description ABSTRACT Bone marrow stromal/stem cells represent a quiescent cell population that replenish the osteoblast bone‐forming cell pool with age and in response to injury, maintaining bone mass and repair. A potent mediator of stromal/stem cell differentiation in vitro and bone formation in vivo is physical loading, yet it still remains unclear whether loading‐induced bone formation requires the osteogenic differentiation of these resident stromal/stem cells. Therefore, in this study, we utilized the leptin receptor (LepR) to identify and trace the contribution of bone marrow stromal cells to mechanoadaptation of bone in vivo. Twelve‐week‐old Lepr‐cre;tdTomato mice were subjected to compressive tibia loading with an 11 N peak load for 40 cycles, every other day for 2 weeks. Histological analysis revealed that Lepr‐cre;tdTomato+ cells arise perinatally around blood vessels and populate bone surfaces as lining cells or osteoblasts before a percentage undergo osteocytogenesis. Lepr‐cre;tdTomato+ stromal cells within the marrow increase in abundance with age, but not following the application of tibial compressive loading. Mechanical loading induces an increase in bone mass and bone formation parameters, yet does not evoke an increase in Lepr‐cre;tdTomato+ osteoblasts or osteocytes. To investigate whether adenylyl cyclase‐6 (AC6) in LepR cells contributes to this mechanoadaptive response, Lepr‐cre;tdTomato mice were further crossed with AC6fl/fl mice to generate a LepR+ cell‐specific knockout of AC6. These Lepr‐cre;tdTomato;AC6fl/fl animals have an attenuated response to compressive tibia loading, characterized by a deficient load‐induced osteogenic response on the endosteal bone surface. This, therefore, shows that Lepr‐cre;tdTomato+ cells contribute to short‐term bone mechanoadaptation. © 2020 The Authors. JBMR Plus published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
topic ADENYLYL CYCLASE 6
BONE ADAPTATION
IN VIVO MECHANICAL LOADING
MECHANOBIOLOGY
STEM CELLS
url https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm4.10408
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