CD13 is a critical regulator of cell–cell fusion in osteoclastogenesis
Abstract The transmembrane aminopeptidase CD13 is highly expressed in cells of the myeloid lineage, regulates dynamin-dependent receptor endocytosis and recycling and is a necessary component of actin cytoskeletal organization. Here, we show that CD13-deficient mice present a low bone density phenot...
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2021-05-01
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doaj-c76605703dea4829b0ced176c41a20672021-05-30T11:38:19ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-05-0111111410.1038/s41598-021-90271-xCD13 is a critical regulator of cell–cell fusion in osteoclastogenesisMallika Ghosh0Tomislav Kelava1Ivana Vrhovac Madunic2Ivo Kalajzic3Linda H. Shapiro4Center for Vascular Biology, University of Connecticut Medical SchoolCenter for Regenerative Medicine and Skeletal Development, University of Connecticut Dental SchoolCenter for Regenerative Medicine and Skeletal Development, University of Connecticut Dental SchoolCenter for Regenerative Medicine and Skeletal Development, University of Connecticut Dental SchoolCenter for Vascular Biology, University of Connecticut Medical SchoolAbstract The transmembrane aminopeptidase CD13 is highly expressed in cells of the myeloid lineage, regulates dynamin-dependent receptor endocytosis and recycling and is a necessary component of actin cytoskeletal organization. Here, we show that CD13-deficient mice present a low bone density phenotype with increased numbers of osteoclasts per bone surface, but display a normal distribution of osteoclast progenitor populations in the bone marrow and periphery. In addition, the bone formation and mineral apposition rates are similar between genotypes, indicating a defect in osteoclast-specific function in vivo. Lack of CD13 led to exaggerated in vitro osteoclastogenesis as indicated by significantly enhanced fusion of bone marrow-derived multinucleated osteoclasts in the presence of M-CSF and RANKL, resulting in abnormally large cells containing remarkably high numbers of nuclei. Mechanistically, while expression levels of the fusion-regulatory proteins dynamin and DC-STAMP1 must be downregulated for fusion to proceed, these are aberrantly sustained at high levels even in CD13-deficient mature multi-nucleated osteoclasts. Further, the stability of fusion-promoting proteins is maintained in the absence of CD13, implicating CD13 in protein turnover mechanisms. Together, we conclude that CD13 may regulate cell–cell fusion by controlling the expression and localization of key fusion regulatory proteins that are critical for osteoclast fusion.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-90271-x |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Mallika Ghosh Tomislav Kelava Ivana Vrhovac Madunic Ivo Kalajzic Linda H. Shapiro |
spellingShingle |
Mallika Ghosh Tomislav Kelava Ivana Vrhovac Madunic Ivo Kalajzic Linda H. Shapiro CD13 is a critical regulator of cell–cell fusion in osteoclastogenesis Scientific Reports |
author_facet |
Mallika Ghosh Tomislav Kelava Ivana Vrhovac Madunic Ivo Kalajzic Linda H. Shapiro |
author_sort |
Mallika Ghosh |
title |
CD13 is a critical regulator of cell–cell fusion in osteoclastogenesis |
title_short |
CD13 is a critical regulator of cell–cell fusion in osteoclastogenesis |
title_full |
CD13 is a critical regulator of cell–cell fusion in osteoclastogenesis |
title_fullStr |
CD13 is a critical regulator of cell–cell fusion in osteoclastogenesis |
title_full_unstemmed |
CD13 is a critical regulator of cell–cell fusion in osteoclastogenesis |
title_sort |
cd13 is a critical regulator of cell–cell fusion in osteoclastogenesis |
publisher |
Nature Publishing Group |
series |
Scientific Reports |
issn |
2045-2322 |
publishDate |
2021-05-01 |
description |
Abstract The transmembrane aminopeptidase CD13 is highly expressed in cells of the myeloid lineage, regulates dynamin-dependent receptor endocytosis and recycling and is a necessary component of actin cytoskeletal organization. Here, we show that CD13-deficient mice present a low bone density phenotype with increased numbers of osteoclasts per bone surface, but display a normal distribution of osteoclast progenitor populations in the bone marrow and periphery. In addition, the bone formation and mineral apposition rates are similar between genotypes, indicating a defect in osteoclast-specific function in vivo. Lack of CD13 led to exaggerated in vitro osteoclastogenesis as indicated by significantly enhanced fusion of bone marrow-derived multinucleated osteoclasts in the presence of M-CSF and RANKL, resulting in abnormally large cells containing remarkably high numbers of nuclei. Mechanistically, while expression levels of the fusion-regulatory proteins dynamin and DC-STAMP1 must be downregulated for fusion to proceed, these are aberrantly sustained at high levels even in CD13-deficient mature multi-nucleated osteoclasts. Further, the stability of fusion-promoting proteins is maintained in the absence of CD13, implicating CD13 in protein turnover mechanisms. Together, we conclude that CD13 may regulate cell–cell fusion by controlling the expression and localization of key fusion regulatory proteins that are critical for osteoclast fusion. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-90271-x |
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