Osteocyte Biology

Osteocyte Biology

C H A P T E R 10 Osteocyte Biology Lynda F. Bonewald The Department of Oral and Craniofacial Sciences, University of Missouri at Kansas City, School...

2MB Sizes 4 Downloads 142 Views

C H A P T E R

10

Osteocyte Biology Lynda F. Bonewald The Department of Oral and Craniofacial Sciences, University of Missouri at Kansas City, School of Dentistry, Kansas City, MO, USA

INTRODUCTION

OSTEOCYTE ONTOGENY

Osteocytes are defined as cells embedded in the mineralized bone matrix and compose over 90% to 95% of all bone cells [1]. They are regularly dispersed throughout the mineralized matrix, connected to each other and cells on the bone surface through slender, cytoplasmic processes radiating in all directions but generally perpendicular to the bone surface. The cell processes or dendrites pass through the bone in thin canals, called canaliculi, which connect osteocytes with cells on the bone surface (Fig. 10.1). These cells are defined by their location, not by their function as is the case for osteoblasts and osteoclasts. This lack of a functional definition implies a lack of knowledge of function. Since this chapter was first written in 2005, a virtual explosion of data regarding osteocyte function has occurred within the last 6 years. Previously the major function of osteocytes was thought to be to translate mechanical strain into biochemical signals between osteocytes and cells on the bone surface to affect (re)modeling. Osteocytes are thought to respond to mechanical strain to send signals of resorption or formation [2]. Not only do these cells communicate with each other and with cells on the bone surface but their dendritic processes are in contact with the bone marrow [3]. Multiple connections through the tips of their dendritic processes imply that osteocytes function as “communicators”. Not only do these cells function as mechanosensors, communicators, and orchestrators of bone modeling and remodeling, but also as regulators of calcium and phosphate homeostasis and function as endocrine cells sending signals to distant tissues [4]. These cells have proven to be multifunctional as outlined in this chapter (Fig. 10.1).

Osteoprogenitor cells residing in the bone marrow give rise to osteoblasts that progress through a series of maturational stages resulting in the mature osteocyte. Biomarkers and functional assays have been used to discriminate between these various stages. Whereas numerous markers for osteoblasts are available (cbfa1, osterix, alkaline phosphatase, collagen type I, osteocalcin, etc., see also Chapter 9), few markers have been available for osteocytes until recently. It would be expected that osteocytes would share some markers with their progenitors – osteoblasts, but would also express unique markers based on their morphology and potential function. Kalajzic and coworkers have used promoters for osteocalcin and collagen type I linked to green fluorescent protein (GFP) to examine transgene expression during osteoblast differentiation [5]. Osteocalcin-GFP was expressed in a few osteoblastic cells lining the endosteal bone surface and in scattered osteocytes whereas GFP driven by the collagen type I promoter was strongly expressed in osteoblasts and osteocytes. These investigators also generated an osteocyte-selective promoter, the 8 kb dentin matrix protein 1 (DMP1) driving GFP that showed exclusive expression in osteocytes [6]. The differentiating osteoblast has one of three fates; it can become embedded in its own osteoid and continue differentiation into an osteocyte, it can quiesce into a lining cell, or, more likely, it can undergo apoptosis (for review see Manalogas [7]). Karsdal and coworkers proposed that matrix metalloproteinase activation of latent transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) blocks osteoblast apoptosis thereby delaying differentiation into osteocytes [8]. Identification of mechanisms responsible for osteoblast apoptosis has implications for development

Osteoporosis. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-415853-5.00010-8

209

Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

210

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

FIGURE 10.2  Osteoblast to osteocyte ontogeny. This diagram r­ epresents the process of differentiation from osteoblast precursors to matrix-producing cells, to cells embedded in osteoid, to cells embedded in the mineralized matrix. The markers listed below are relative and overlapping. E11 is the earliest marker specific for the embedding osteocyte [26,28]. There appears to be some early expression of Dmp1 and Phex in osteoblasts, but the greatest expression is found in osteocytes FIGURE 10.1  Procion red staining of the osteocye lacuno-­ [36,37,41]. The expression of sclerostin or Sost in osteocytes a­ ppears delayed compared to other markers for osteocytes [54]. (See color plate.) canalicular system in mouse cortical bone. Note the complexity of the network and the orderly alignment of lacunae. Source: figure provided by Dr. Jian Feng, University of Missouri-Kansas City. see Franz-Odendaal et al. [14] and Dallas and Bonewald

of strategies that could potentially increase bone mass. Inhibition of osteocyte apoptosis may have beneficial or nonbeneficial effects on bone depending on condition as addressed later in this review (Fig. 10.2).

OSTEOID-OSTEOCYTES Osteoblasts, osteoid cells, and osteocytes may play different roles in the initiation and regulation of mineralization of bone. In 1976 and 1981, Bordier and ­coworkers [9] and Nijweide and coworkers [10] proposed that osteoid-osteocytes play an important role in the initiation and control of mineralization of the bone matrix. Osteoid-osteocytes were described by Palumbo [11] to be cells actively making matrix and calcifying this matrix. Like osteoblasts, their activity is polarized toward the mineralization front to which their cellular processes are oriented whereas processes oriented toward blood vessels only begin to appear when mineralization begins to spread around the cell. The cell body reduces in size in parallel with the formation of cytoplasmic processes with a reduction of about 30% at the osteoid-osteocyte stage and 70% with complete maturation of the osteocyte. During the time it takes for an osteoblast to become an osteocyte, the cell has manufactured three times its own volume in matrix [12]. Imai and colleagues suggest that osteocytes may recruit osteoblasts and stimulate their differentiation by expressing osteoblaststimulating factor-1 (OSF-1, also known as heparinbinding growth associated molecule, HB-GAM) [13]. For a review of osteoblast to osteocyte transformation

[15]. These authors suggest that once a cell is surrounded by osteoid, the differentiation process does not end, but should be viewed as a continuum. One cell line has been proposed to represent the ­osteoid-osteocyte, MLO-A5 cells. This postosteoblast/ preosteocyte-like cell line, established from the long bones of 14-day-old mice and expressing the large T-antigen driven by the osteocalcin promoter, differentiates into osteoid osteocyte-like cells [16]. These cells will mineralize in the absence of β-glycerolphosphate in 6 to 7 days in sheets, not nodules, and this process is accelerated by the addition of an external source of phosphate. Fourier transform infrared spectra of these cultures are very similar to those in normal bone showing that this cell line reproduces primary mineralization [16]. MLOA5 cells express all of the markers of the late osteoblast such as high alkaline phosphatase, bone sialoprotein, parathyroid hormone (PTH) type 1 receptor, and osteocalcin. In culture, these cells begin to express markers of osteocytes as they generate cell processes. Studies show that these cells generate nanospherulites that mineralize while budding from their developing cellular processes and as these processes narrow in diameter, these mineralized structures become associated with, and initiate, collagen mediated mineralization [17]. Mikuni-Takagaki and colleagues proposed that casein kinase II, produced in high amounts by embedding osteoid osteocytes and not by osteoblasts, is responsible for phosphorylation of matrix proteins essential for mineralization [18]. Phosphoproteins appear to be essential for bone mineralization as evidenced by in vitro crystal nucleation assays [19,20] and in vivo by osteomalacia in animal models with deletion of specific genes such as

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Osteocyte Selective Genes/Proteins and Their Potential Functions

DMP1 and PHEX (phosphate regulating neutral endopeptidase on the chromosome X) [21]. Deletion of inhibitors of mineralization such as osteoblast/osteocyte factor 45/MEPE (matrix extracellular phosphoglycoprotein), results in osteopetrosis [22,23]. These phosphoproteins are expressed late in osteoblast differentiation and are all molecules that are highly expressed in osteoid osteocytes. Therefore, the embedding osteoid cell and the osteocyte play roles in the mineralization process and potentially in phosphate metabolism (see below).

OSTEOCYTE SELECTIVE GENES/ PROTEINS AND THEIR POTENTIAL FUNCTIONS Whereas osteoblasts have been described to have several markers such as runx2, osterix, alkaline phosphatase, collagen type I, and osteocalcin, few markers have been described for osteocytes. Early, initial markers for osteocytes ranged from low alkaline phosphatase to high casein kinase and osteocalcin protein expression, compared to osteoblasts [24]. Antigens such as E11/gp38/ podoplanin have been identified that are more specific for osteocytes compared to osteoblasts, and antigens like Phex, Dmp1, MEPE, sclerostin, ORP150, and fibroblast growth factor (FGF23) have been found to be more highly expressed in osteocytes compared to osteoblasts as discussed below. Franz-Odendaal and coauthors provide a list of molecular markers for the preosteoblast to the osteocyte [14]. E11 is the name given to a molecule that is expressed in early osteocytes [25] and found on the dendritic processes of osteocytes, but not osteoblasts in vivo [26]. A punctate antibody reaction at the interface between osteoblasts and uncalcified osteoid was described. Less reactivity is observed with osteocytes deeper in the bone matrix. This same antibody also reacted with cementocytes [27]. The major function of E11 may be in the formation of dendritic processes as reduction in protein expression led to a decrease in dendrite extension in MLO-Y4 osteocyte-like cells [28] and overexpression in an osteoblast-like cell line led to the generation of extended cytoplasmic processes [29]. Ectopic overexpression in keratinocytes induces plasma membrane extensions, a major reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton, and relocalization of ezrin to cell projections [30]. The molecule colocalizes with ezrin, radixin, and moesin, abbreviated ERM [30], proteins that are concentrated in cell-surface projections where they link the actin cytoskeleton to plasma membrane proteins. ERMs play structural roles and are involved in cell motility [31]. E11 was also found to be physically associated with CD44 in tumor vascular endothelial cells [32]. As CD44 is highly expressed in osteocytes compared to osteoblasts [33] this

211

suggests that E11 associates with CD44 and the ERMs to induce and regulate the formation of dendritic processes in osteoid-osteocytes and osteocytes, but this has yet to be proven. CD44 is a major component of the osteocyte pericellular matrix and is more highly expressed in osteocytes than osteoblasts [33]. CD44 is a membrane-bound protein and hyaluronic acid receptor that interacts with the ERMs. Not only has CD44s been shown to associate with E11 [32] but also with osteopontin [34], another member of the SIBLING (Small, Integrin-Binding LIgand, N-linked Glycoprotein) family, suggesting that other members of this family such as Dmp1 and MEPE may also interact with CD44. Proteomic studies have also been used to identify proteins that are highly expressed by osteocytes as compared to osteoblasts. The expression of ORP150, destrin and macrophage-capping protein (CAPG) were found to be increased in MLO-Y4 cells and osteocytes in vivo, relative to MC3T3 preosteoblasts and osteoblasts, respectively [35]. Destrin and CAPG are believed to play a role in dendrite formation, whereas ORP150 is thought to protect the cells from the hypoxic conditions encountered within the mineralized bone matrix. Peter Nijweide and coworkers found that their osteocyte specific antibody, Mab OB7.3 recognizes Phex [36]. This antibody allowed them to purify avian osteocytes from enzymatically isolated bone cells for subsequent study. Phex was originally described on the plasma membrane of osteoblasts and osteocytes [37] and loss of function mutations in this gene result in X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets [38]. PHEX is a metalloendoproteinase whose substrate is not known. The precise function of PHEX is uncertain but it clearly plays a role in phosphate homeostasis and bone mineralization. These investigators propose that the osteocyte network may be considered to be an endocrine gland that regulates bone phosphate metabolism through expression of PHEX. Loss of PHEX expression, or mutations such as in the X-linked rickets mouse model, the Hyp mouse, lead to increased levels of FGF23 responsible for hypophosphatemia [39]. FGF23 is not normally expressed at high levels in osteocytes in the healthy state but its expression in osteocytes is dramatically elevated in both PHEXand DMP1- associated hypophosphatemic rickets [39]. Osteocytes appear to be the main source of the elevated circulating levels of FGF23 seen in these mouse models, giving support to the notion that osteocytes also act as endocrine cells. Feng and colleagues [40] found the DMP1 gene expressed in early embryonic bone development in hypertrophic chondrocytes and osteoblasts and later during postnatal bone formation where it is highly expressed in osteocytes, consistent with the observations of Toyosawa who observed high expression in

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

212

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

osteocytes, but not in osteoblasts [41]. DMP1 is specifically expressed along and in the canaliculi of osteocytes within the bone matrix [42]. The function of DMP1 in osteocytes may be related to the post-translational ­processing and modifications of the protein as a highly phosphorylated protein and regulator of hydroxyapatite formation [43]. Deletion of this gene in mice results in a phenotype similar if not identical to the hyp phenotype [44], suggesting that DMP1 and PHEX are interactive and essential for phosphate metabolism. Both genes appear to downregulate FGF23. Osteoblast/osteocyte factor 45 (OF45) also known as MEPE is also highly expressed in osteocytes as compared to osteoblasts. MEPE was isolated and cloned from a tumor-induced osteomalacia (TIO) tumor cDNA library [45]. Independently, others isolated and cloned the rat and mouse homologs based on the ability of MEPE to regulate mineralization [46]. The MEPE protein is highly phosphorylated in a region called the ASARM region. Cathepsin D or B can cleave MEPE, releasing the C-­terminal phosphoprotein region, and this C-terminal ASARM region is a potent inhibitor of mineralization in vitro [47–49]. High ASARM peptide production by osteocytes supports the hypothesis that ASARM peptide may play a role in osteomalacia such as that observed in the Hyp mouse model. Messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) expression for OF45/MEPE begins at E20 in more differentiated osteoblasts that have become encapsulated by bone matrix [50]. These authors place the sequence of expression of osteoblast to osteocyte transition markers as osteocalcin during encapsulation, ­followed by DMP1, followed by OF45 as a marker of the mature osteocyte. Deletion of this gene in mice results in increased bone formation and bone mass and resistance to age-associated trabecular bone loss [23]. The authors speculate that as terminally differentiated osteoblasts become embedded in the bone matrix, OF45 expression is increased and maintained in mature osteocytes and that osteocytes act directly on osteoblasts through OF45 to inhibit their bone forming activity. Interestingly, DMP1 and OF45/MEPE belong to the SIBLING family that also includes bone sialoprotein, osteopontin, and sialophosphoprotein [51]. This family of proteins may function differently in osteocytes compared to other cell types especially upon phosphorylation with casein kinase. The SOST gene encodes a protein, sclerostin, which is highly expressed in osteocytes and inhibits bone formation [52]. The human condition of sclerosteosis is due to a premature termination of the SOST gene [53]. Transgenic mice lacking sclerostin have increased bone mass. ­Controversy exists as to whether sclerostin is a bone morphogenetic protein (BMP antagonist) or functions as a Wnt antagonist [54]. Sclerostin appears to be an antagonist of low-density lipoprotein receptorrelated protein (Lrp)5, a gene shown to be important as a

positive regulator of bone mass [55]. It is suggested that sclerostin may be transported through osteocyte canaliculi to the bone surface to inhibit bone-forming osteoblasts. It has also been proposed that the anabolic effects of PTH are through inhibition of SOST expression [56]. Sclerostin expression is decreased by mechanical loading [57] and it has been reported that the anabolic effects of loading are dependent on this decrease in expression [58]. Sclerostin has also been implicated as a regulator of the late osteoblast differentiation to the preosteocyte through its regulation of PHEX and MEPE [59]. The profound gain of bone mass observed after the deletion of Sost has led to the development of monoclonal antibodies directed against sclerostin as a potential anabolic treatment for osteoporosis. Animal studies and early results from clinical trials suggest that these antibodies may be an effective therapeutic for increasing bone mass and for acceleration of fracture healing [60–62]. Osteocytes have also been found to be intensively immunoreactive for neurokinin-1 whereas lining cells were found to be positive for neurokinin-2 [63]. ­Neurokinin-1 and neurokinin-2 are tachykinin receptors for neuropeptides. The presence of these receptors suggests that sensory nerves may regulate the function of bone cells. Microarrays have shown increased expression of genes associated with neurons such as neuropeptide Y in osteocytes. Neuropeptide Y can be modulated by mechanical loading, and osteocyte-expressed neuropeptide Y can inhibit osteoblast activity and differentiation [64]. For additional hypotheses concerning the possible relationship of the neural system to bone see review by Turner [65].

MORPHOLOGY OF OSTEOCYTES: LACUNOCANALICULAR SYSTEM AND DENDRITE FORMATION The transformation of a plump polygonal osteoblast to a dendritic osteocyte is striking and dramatic and clearly requires extensive reorganization of the cytoskeleton. The osteocyte loses the typical apical and basolateral plasma membrane polarization characteristic of osteoblasts [66]. Actin filaments were found to be ­crucial for the maintenance of the osteocyte processes and two actin-bundling proteins, α-actinin and fimbrin were shown to be useful as markers for osteocytes [67]. Stronger signals of fimbrin were observed at branching points in dendrites. Villin, another actin-bundling protein, is also higher in osteocytes than osteoblasts. Staining ­patterns were distinct between osteoblasts and osteocytes with filamin along stress fibers in osteoblasts, but only at the base of processes in osteocytes. Staining for spectrin was punctate in osteoblasts but filamentous in osteocytes [68].

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Morphology of Osteocytes: Lacunocanalicular System and Dendrite Formation

As discussed above, a hydrophobic membrane protein called E11 appears to play a role in dendrite formation. Although known as E11 in osteocytes, it is known by other names (gp38/podoplanin/T1α) in other cell types (endothelial cells/podocytes in kidney/type II alveolar lung cells). The earliest description of the gene for E11 was in 1990 as a previously unknown phorbol ester inducible gene in MC3T3 osteoblast-like cells, called OTS-8 [69]. A common feature of virtually all cell types that express E11 is their extended cytoplasm or dendritic nature. The fact that E11 is often found in cells that are exposed to an external or internal fluid compartment and is highly negatively charged and resistant to proteases suggests the molecule provides a physical barrier that plays a role in protecting cells. Deletion of E11 results in mice that die at birth due to respiratory failure as a result of failure of type II alveolar lung cells to differentiate into type I alveolar lung cells [70]. A potential function for E11 in osteocytes was shown by reducing its protein expression using a small interfering ribonucleic acid (siRNA) approach which prevented dendrite elongation in MLO-Y4 cells in response to shear stress [28]. Also as mentioned above, osteocytes embedding into osteoid express greater amounts of destrin and CapG, which is thought to play a role in actin filament reorganization, than osteoblasts on the bone surface [35]. Paic et al. showed that the actin binding protein, Capzb, is upregulated in osteocytes together with several genes related to muscle contractility, such as myosin heavy and light chains, α-actin, troponins, tropomyosins, and α-actinin [71]. Both CapG and Capzb belong to the gelsolin family of proteins, which regulate the length of actin filaments by capping their barbed positive ends. Destrin is a member of the actin depolymerizing factor/cofilin family and regulates actin assembly and disassembly. These proteins control the dynamics of actin polymerization and depolymerization. Osteocytogenesis has been thought to be a process whereby some osteoblasts become encased in osteoid that passively mineralizes. The embedded cell does not participate in the embedding or mineralization process but is acted upon by surface cells. However, Holmbeck and colleagues have shown osteocytogenesis to be an active invasive process requiring cleavage of collagen and potentially other matrix molecules [72]. Osteocytes in mice null for the metalloproteinase MT1-MMP have significantly reduced number and length of dendritic processes. MT1-MMP is a membrane-anchored proteinase that can cleave collagens type I, II, and III; fibrin; fibronectin; and other matrix molecules. In this mouse model, the almost complete lack of dendritic processes did not appear to affect viability or density of osteocytes. This is in contrast to studies by Zhao and coworkers [73] where osteocytes in a mouse model of collagenase resistant type I collagen did show increased apoptosis.

213

However, in the MT1-MMP null mouse it is difficult to determine the effect of a lack of dendritic processes on either osteocyte function or effects on the skeleton as this mouse exhibits multiple defects, such as dwarfism, due to a lack of MT1-MMP in other skeletal tissues [74]. Interestingly, these investigators and others [75] have shown an age-dependent increase in the number of canaliculi suggesting: 1) that new bone made in the adult or aging animals generates osteocytes with more canaliculi or 2) that the embedded osteocyte can generate new dendrites (Fig. 10.3). The osteocyte has been viewed as a quiescent cell type. However, evidence is accumulating that these cells are more active than previously known. Dallas and colleagues

FIGURE 10.3  Osteocytes make contact with cells on the bone s­ urface. The image is an acid-etched resin embedded murine bone visualized by scanning electron microscopy showing the high interconnectivity of the osteocyte lacuna-canalicular system. The top figure shows the resin- embedded marrow on the top and the complex osteocyte lacuno-canalicular network below where the mineral has been removed by acid etching. The bottom figure is a magnification showing canaliculi in contact with the bottom of a cell on the surface of the bone (arrow).

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

214

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

used calvarial explants from transgenic mice with GFP expression targeted to osteocytes [6] and time lapse dynamic imaging to observe living osteocytes within their lacunae [76,77]. Surprisingly, these studies have revealed that, far from being static, the osteocyte may be highly dynamic. Embedded osteocytes expand and contract their cell body within the boundaries of their lacunae and extend and retract their dendrites over a 24-hour period. These data suggest that dendrites, rather than being permanent connections between osteocytes and between osteocytes and surface cells, may be dynamic structures that can be altered in response to stimuli.

OSTEOCYTE CELL MODELS There are several reasons why much less is known concerning osteocyte function compared to osteoblasts and osteoclasts. These include: 1) it is difficult to isolate sufficient numbers of osteocytes from the mineralized bone matrix for many types of studies, 2) it is difficult to maintain their differentiated function in vitro, 3) there was a lack of suitable cell lines, and 4) there was a lack of availability of osteocyte-specific promoters for targeted transgenic approaches. Primary cultures of ­osteocyte-like cells can be prepared by sequential alternating digestions of fetal rat and chick calvaria with ­collagenase and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) [24,78]. Cells removed in early digests are fibroblasts/ osteoblasts and those released later represent a population enriched for osteocytes. An osteocyte-specific antibody for avian osteocytes, Mab OB7.3, which recognizes Phex was successfully used in antibody panning techniques to obtain an essentially pure population of avian osteocytes [78]. Each of these isolation procedures works best with young or hypomineralized bone, but not with adult or aged hypermineralized bone. Stern and colleagues have developed an approach where hypermineralized bone particles can be generated to yield an osteocyte population that can be used for experiments [79]. These primary osteocyte culture systems have been useful in beginning to define the properties of these cells and investigate their biochemistry. Mice have been generated in which the 8 kb DMP1 promoter drives GFP expression [6]. As this promoter is specifically expressed in osteocytes, these mice can be used to study osteocytes especially in conjunction with fluorescence activated cell sorting to obtain a highly purified population. However, the yields of primary osteocytes are low thereby making it difficult to obtain large enough ­numbers of cells for detailed or extensive biochemical studies. To compensate for these difficulties, investigators have attempted to make osteocyte cell lines. To date, there are four models with osteocyte-like characteristics: HOP-01-C1, MLO-Y4, MLO-A5, and IDG-SW3. One

early model of the pre- or early osteocyte is the HOB01-C1 human bone cell line [80], a temperature-sensitive line that proliferates at 34 °C and stops growing at 39 °C. They have cellular processes, low alkaline phosphatase, high osteocalcin, and high CD44 expression. An early murine model for early osteocytes is the MLO-Y4 osteocyte-like cell line that has been used extensively to investigate osteocyte function [81]. This cell line was derived from a transgenic mouse in which the immortalizing T antigen was expressed under control of the osteocalcin promoter. MLO-Y4 cells exhibit properties of osteocytes including high expression of osteocalcin, low expression of alkaline phosphatase, high expression of connexin 43, and the antigen E11, a known marker of osteocytes. MLO-Y4 cells retain a dendritic morphology, similar to that observed in primary osteocyte cultures. Numerous laboratories have used this cell line to investigate osteocyte cell function and it is suggested that the reader search PubMed for this information. As discussed above, the MLO-A5 cell line has characteristics of a postosteoblast/preosteocyte. These cells are very large, over 100 nm in diameter, express all of the markers of the late osteoblast such as extremely high alkaline phosphatase, bone sialoprotein, PTH type 1 receptor, and osteocalcin, and rapidly mineralize in sheets, not nodules [16]. In culture, these cells begin to express markers of osteocytes as they generate cell processes such as E11 [17]. Bellido and coworkers found that Sost expression is regulated by PTH in these cells [56]. MLO-A5 cells grown on a three-dimensional (3-D) scaffold show a positive correlation between mechanical loading and mineralization [82], and they decrease their mineralization in response to high levels of hypoxia [83] or with nutrient deprivation when they also begin to undergo autophagy [84]. A cell line has been generated that differentiates from the late osteoblast to the late osteocyte called IDG-SW3 [85]. The cell line was created by crossing the with the 8  kb-Dmp1-GFP transgenic mouse line [6] with the Immortomouse®. This mouse carries a γ-interferon (IFN)inducible promoter driving expression of a thermolabile large T antigen (H-2Kb-tsA58), enabling conditionally immortalization of cells derived from their tissues. GFPpositive cells were isolated from the long bones of a 3 month old mouse by fluorescence-activated cell sorting to establish this cell line. These cells express the SV40 T antigen when cultured at 33 °C in the presence of γ-IFN and proliferate rapidly. However in the absence of γ-IFN and cultured at 37 °C, their proliferation is reduced and the cells undergo differentiation if supplemented with ascorbic acid and β-glycerophosphate. IDG-SW3 cells synthesize and mineralize a “honeycomb-like” matrix rich in type-I collagen similar to MLO-A5 cells. These cells temporally express osteocyte marker genes from the early osteocyte marker E11 to the mature osteocyte

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Mechanisms and Response of Osteocytes to Mechanical Forces

marker sclerostin. Similar to osteocytes in vivo, these cells have been shown to increase FGF23 mRNA expression in response to treatment with 1,25-­dihydroxyvitamin D3 and to downregulate Sost expression with PTH treatment [85]. This cell line faithfully recapitulates the differentiation process from osteoblast to late osteocyte as observed in vivo.

MECHANISMS AND RESPONSE OF OSTEOCYTES TO MECHANICAL FORCES A known key regulator of osteoblast and osteoclast activity in bone is mechanical strain. Under normal conditions, are balanced to maintain bone mass. However, by the process of adaptive remodeling, the skeleton is able to adapt continually to its mechanical environment by adding new bone to withstand increased amounts of loading and removing bone in response to unloading or disuse (reviewed in Burr et al. [86] and Ehrlich et al. [87]). It was actually Galileo in 1638 who is first documented as suggesting that the shape of bones is related to loading. Julius Wolff in 1892 more eloquently suggested that bone accommodates or responds to strain. The cells of bone with the potential for sensing mechanical strain and translating these forces into biochemical signals include bone lining cells, osteoblasts, and osteocytes. Of these, the osteocytes, with their distribution throughout the bone matrix and their high degree of interconnectivity, are thought to be one of the major cell types responsible for sensing mechanical strain and translating that strain into biochemical signals related to the intensity and distribution of the strain signals [2]. This hypothesis has been supported by studies by Tatsumi and colleagues who found that mice with targeted deletion of osteocytes using the diphtheria toxin receptor were resistant to unloadinginduced bone loss [88]. Various studies have demonstrated load-related responses in osteocytes, supporting their proposed role as mechanotransducers in bone. Within a few minutes of loading, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, a marker of cell metabolism, is increased in osteocytes and lining cells [89–91]. By 2 hours, c-fos mRNA is evident in osteocytes and by 4 hours, TGFβ and insulinlike growth factor-1 (IGF-1) mRNAs are increased [92]. The DMP1 gene is activated in response to mechanical loading in osteocytes in the tooth movement model [93] and in the mouse ulna loading model of bone formation [94]. E11 is also increased in response to mechanical load, not only in cells near the bone surface by also in deeply embedded osteocytes [28]. It has been shown that unloading increases receptor activator of nuclear factor kappaB ligand (RANKL) expression in osteocytes [95], which may be responsible for the bone loss associated

215

with unloading. Mechanical loading has been shown to reduce sclerostin in the mature osteocytes [57], whereas hind-limb unloading has been shown to increase sclerostin expression [96]. Deletion of Lrp5, a major coreceptor for Wnt signaling, resulted in mice that showed impaired osteogenic responses to anabolic loading. Deletion of only one allele of β-catenin results in mice with a normal skeleton but a completely abrogated response to anabolic loading [97]. Taking all these studies together, it appears that the components of the β-catenin pathway play an important in bone responses to loading. The parameters for inducing bone formation or bone resorption in vivo are fairly well known and well characterized. Bone mass is influenced by peak applied strain as shown by Rubin and Lanyon [98,99]. Bone formation rate is related to loading rate as shown by varying the frequency of applied bending while keeping the magnitude of applied load constant [100]. At bending frequencies of 0.5 to 2.0 Hz, bone formation rate increased as much as fourfold while no increase was observed at frequencies lower than 0.5 Hz. When rest periods are inserted, the loaded bone shows increased bone formation rates and mechanical properties when compared to bone subjected to a single bout of mechanical loading [101]. Frequency, intensity, and timing of loading are all important parameters. Improved bone structure and strength is greatest if loading is applied in shorter versus longer increments [102]. By studying the effect of frequency and peak strain on mechanically induced bone formation in the rat ulna loading model, Hsieh and Turner [103], built a model that assumed bone cells are activated by fluid shear stress and that stiffness of the cells and the matrix around the cells increases at higher loading frequencies because of viscoelasticity. In this model there is a strain threshold for an osteogenic response that varies with location. For example, in the proximal region of the ulna, the strain required to achieve new bone formation is 1300 microstrain whereas different bone formation thresholds exist at the midshaft (2200 microstrain) and the distal region (3000 microstrain) [104]. The major challenge has been to translate in vivo parameters of mechanical loading to in vitro cell culture models. Even though osteocytes are thought to be mechanosensors [105–107], key questions such as how mechanical loading is sensed, how these signals are conveyed to other nonsensing cells, and how these signals are translated into biochemical signals remain to be answered. Over the years, various theoretical and experimental studies argue that flow of interstitial fluid driven by extravascular pressure as well as by the applied cyclic mechanical loading is likely the means by which bone cells are informed of mechanical loading [105,108–112]. It has been found that mechanical forces applied to bone cause fluid flow through the canaliculi surrounding the osteocyte that is probably responsible for the

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

216

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

deformation of the cell membrane [109,113,114]. Fluid flow imposes a shear stress on osteocytes, thus deforming the cells within their lacunae and the dendrites within their canaliculi. Theoretical modeling predicts osteocyte wall shear stresses resulting from peak physiologic loads in vivo in the range of 8 to 30 dynes/cm2 [109]. The first real-time attempts to measure solute transport in bone through dye diffusion within the lacunar-canalicular system have been conducted in vivo [115]. These studies confirm earlier tracer studies of Beno and colleagues [116] that the molecular weight cutoff for molecules in bone fluid is less than 7 nm, about the diameter of albumin. It is hoped that future studies will permit analysis of the effects of mechanical loading and blood pressure in this process (Fig. 10.4). A model of strain amplification in osteocyte cell processes was proposed by Weinbaum and coworkers [117] using a transmission electron microscopy-based model of the osteocyte process within its canaliculi at the osteocyte dendrite level. One of the requirements of the model is that osteocyte dendritic processes be tethered within canaliculi to the surrounding mineralized matrix through structural components, such as CD44, laminins, and a variety of other unknown proteins and proteoglycans present in the pericellular matrix surrounding

the osteocyte. Another major requirement of the model is the formation of hexagonal actin bundles within the cell processes of the osteocyte. A relatively stiff structure can be generated with fimbrin predominately being cross-linked to actin bundles. The actin bundle is then attached to integrin related proteins through myosin type proteins, ERMs, and others. The model predicts that fluid flow through this structure will deform the shape of these tethering elements, creating a drag force predominately in this highly viscous, yet sieving pericellular matrix that then imposes a hoop strain on the central actin bundles in the osteocyte cell process. Wang et al. in 2007 [118] expanded this model to include integrin attachment to conical projections on the canalicular wall which amplified strain to 10 times the hoop strain predicted by Han [117]. These investigators have proposed that the osteocyte only senses mechanical load through its dendritic processes and that the osteocyte cell body is relatively insensitive to mechanical strain [117,119]. Studies applying shear stress to either the cell body or the dendrites of MLO-Y4 cells suggest that the glycocalyx present on the surface of dendritic processes, but not the cell body, plays an essential role in mechanotransduction by dendrites [120] but the cell body is still responsive.

FIGURE 10.4  Canaliculi, dendrites, and fluid flow: it has been proposed that molecules travel in the bone fluid through a glycocalyx which surrounds the dendritic processes within the caniluculi [303]. The dendritic process appears to be anchored to the wall of the canaliculi by integrins [144]. The glycocalyx acts as a sieve or “fishnet” to allow molecules below a size of approximately 7 nm to pass [304]. Studies suggest that molecules as large as albumin can pass through the canaliculi and that the bone fluid serves to provide nutrients to the osteocyte. It has been proposed that immobilization causes a lack of bone fluid flow which in turn causes hypoxia, followed by osteocyte cell death [305]. Fluid flow-induced prostaglandin (PG)E2 release by MLO-Y4 cells is reduced by the degradation of the glycocalyx on the cell surface, a hypothesized mechanosensor in osteocytes [306]. Clearly the dendritic processes of osteocytes serve numerous functions.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Mechanisms and Response of Osteocytes to Mechanical Forces

It has also been proposed that mechanical information is relayed in part by cell deformation [121,122]. Typical in vivo strains in humans are on the order of 1200 uE (principal compressive strain) to 1900 uE (maximum shear strain) [123]. These strains were determined using strain gages that covered an area approximately 1.8 mm by 3.6 mm containing thousands of cells and are therefore averages of osteocyte strain. Variations resulting from microstructural features or discontinuities in the bone matrix will affect the local strain or deformation sensed by individual bone cells. Measured microstructural strains at or near osteocyte lacunae were found to be up to three times greater than the average strains measured with an external strain gage [122]. If bone damage (microcracks) is present, the perilacunar strain magnification near a microcrack tip can be as high as 15 times in vivo measured bone strain. Real-time measurement of load-induced solute transport has been performed and these studies suggested a peak shear stress of 5 Pa (30 dynes/cm2) suggesting that higher strains can occur in vivo [124]. Nicolella and colleagues reported that the osteocyte lacuna acts as a strain concentrator that amplifies the macroscopic strain applied to the whole bone and this amplification factor is a function of the local perilacunar bone tissue material properties [125,126]. Using a microstructural finite element analysis model, they found that changes in the osteocyte cell body and cell process modulus had little effect on the maximum strain in the osteocyte, the average strain in the cell process, or on the maximum strain in the lacuna. However, changing the material properties of the perilacunar matrix had the greatest impact on the strain transmitted to the osteocyte, with the maximum osteocyte strain relating inversely to the perilacunar tissue modulus. Therefore, any mechanism that changes the material properties of the perilacunar matrix (see below) will have consequences on mechanosensation by osteocytes. An in vivo approach has been taken to tackle the question of what magnitude of strain an osteocyte perceives and how magnitude correlates with biological response [127]. These investigators have determined magnitude of strain (the effector) with mapped gene expression (early biological response) with bone formation (end biological result). This information was used to generate a 3-D model correlating magnitude of strain with magnitude and location of DMP1 and MEPE gene expression (as these are highly expressed in osteocytes) with resulting areas of new bone formation on the bone surface. The data to date show that osteocytes can respond as a population to increased strain, and that the response of each individual osteocyte also correlates with magnitude of strain in its local environment. In in vitro cell culture, numerous investigators have used osteoblast cell lines under the assumption that

217

osteocytes will respond in a similar manner, however, primary osteocytes have been shown to be more sensitive than primary osteoblasts in the release of prostaglandin (PG)E2 following both hydrostatic compression and pulsatile fluid flow treatment, with pulsatile fluid flow being most effective [128]. MLO-Y4 osteocyte-like cells are several orders of magnitude more sensitive to fluid flow shear stress than 2T3 osteoblast-like cells [129] and MC3T3 osteoblast cells [130,131]. Osteoblastlike cells are less responsive to oscillatory flow (applied fluid shear stresses of –20 to +20 dynes/cm2) than pulsatile fluid flow (applied fluid shear stresses of 0 to 20 dynes/cm2) and steady fluid flow (applied fluid shear stresses 20 dynes/cm2) [132]. Osteoblasts do respond to mechanical loading with an increase in mineralization as shown using MLO-A5 cells grown on a 3-D scaffold [82]. Correlation and validation of shear stress used in tissue culture with those in vivo remains to be performed. It was hypothesized in 2003 that the bending of primary cilium of an osteocyte by extracellular fluid sends signals into cells through gap junctions [133]. MLO-Y4 cells and MC3T3 cells express primary cilia [134] and removing the cilia reduced the amount of PG released by MLO-Y4 cells in response to fluid flow shear stress cells [135]. These authors state that the mechanism used by primary cilia in bone cells is distinct from that of kidney cells as primary cilia in bone cells do not appear to mediate calcium flux in response to fluid flow [135]. It has been shown that primary cilia signal through cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) and adenylyl cyclase 6 [136] and can mediate signaling between osteocytes and mesenchymal stem cells [137]. It is well known that polycystin 1 and 2 (PC1 and PC2) encoded by the genes Pkd1 and Pkd2 are part of a mechanosensing complex in renal cells and also play a role in normal bone structure [134]. Mice with impaired PC1 function develop osteopenia [134]. It has been shown that deletion of PKD1 in osteocytes using the 10-kb Dmp1-Cre results in reduced bone mass in the young skeleton, which subsequently recovers in the adult skeleton. However, despite recovery, the skeleton of adult mice remains less responsive to anabolic load [138]. The effects of deleting PC1 are reversed by deleting Kif3a, a transport protein known to play a role in the function of cilia [139]. It is not clear how a single cilium on an osteocyte cell body within a lacuna can mediate these effects. McNamara and colleagues have found cilia only on osteocytes close to the periosteal surface and not deeper in mature bone [140]. They propose that bone cell cilia are chemical rather than fluid flow sensors and their function may be more related to mineralization than to mechanosensing. Integrins have been proposed to play a role in mechanotransduction. Integrins, comprised of heterodimers of α and β subunits, are major receptors/transducers that connect the cytoskeleton to the extracellular matrix [141]

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

218

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

and have been proposed to be candidate mechanosensors in bone cells [142]. Stretch and fluid flow shear stress stimulate pathways that are regulated by integrin binding to the extracellular matrix [143]. Among various isotypes of integrins, α5 and β1 integrins are expressed in virtually all cell types in bone [144]. Integrins interact with plasma membrane proteins such as metalloproteases, receptors, transporters, and channels mainly through the extracellular domain of their α subunits [145]. The evidence for the involvement of integrins in gap junction communication and Cx43 expression has been reported [146,147]. The integrin α5 appears to act as a tethering protein that responds to shear stress by opening hemichannels in osteocytes [148]. Integrin α5β1 interacts with Cx43 independent of the integrin’s association with fibronectin and interaction with the extracellular matrix [149]. Therefore, fluid flow shear stress may have two major effects on the osteocyte mediated through integrins. The first is the well-known kinetics of the integrin acting as a linker between the extracellular matrix and the intracellular cytoskeleton. The second, novel effect is through the opening of hemichannels releasing small molecules such as PG with autocrine and paracrine effects. In addition to mechanical loading, both ultrasound and electromagnetic fields have been thought to affect bone cell function. Low-intensity pulsed ultrasound is a form of mechanical energy used to accelerate fracture repair and distraction osteogenesis. Osteoblasts respond to ultrasound by increased expression of osteocalcin and IGF-1, while osteocytes do not [150]. Conversely, substrate stretch and PTH increase Ca2+ influx in osteocytes, not osteoblasts suggesting that the anabolic effects of ultrasound are through the osteoblast and that osteoblasts and osteocytes can respond distinctly to various forms of mechanical force. Pulsed electromagnetic fields increase TGFβ and PGE2 in the osteocyte-like cell line, MLO-Y4, but decrease Cx43 expression in these cells as well as ROS 17/2.8 osteoblastlike cells [151]. As pulsed electromagnetic fields have been used to treat ununited fractures, these healing effects may be partially mediated by the induction of bone anabolic factors such as TGFβ and PGE2 and by reducing osteocyte communication through Cx 43-containing gap junctions. TGFβ produced by osteocytes could be delaying osteoblast differentiation while increasing bone matrix volume [8].

OSTEOCYTE SIGNALS FOR BONE FORMATION Nitric oxide (NO) is a short-lived free radical important for the function of many tissues and organs. In bone, NO inhibits resorption and promotes bone formation. NO reduces osteocyte apoptosis [152,153]. Both

osteoblasts and osteocytes release NO in response to mechanical strain or fluid flow shear stress [154]. NO can be generated from any of three isoforms of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), known as neural (n), endothelial (e), and inducible (i) NOS. Osteoblasts and osteocytes have highest expression of eNOS compared to the other synthases. eNOS-positive osteocytes in cases of femoral hip fracture are reduced in the inferior but not the superior region of the femoral neck compared to normal controls [155] suggesting that eNOS-positive osteocytes act as sentinels to confine osteoclast activity to single osteons. Even though studies have shown little or no expression of iNOS in osteocytes, mice lacking this enzyme fail to regain bone after immobilization [156]. These mice show no significant bone abnormalities unlike mice lacking eNOS in which bone growth is retarded. Surprisingly, iNOS has no effect on resorption in the unloading phase but is essential for bone formation in the reloading phase. iNOS expression was only found after unloading and reloading of bone, not in the normal loaded state. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is released within seconds in osteoblasts in response to mechanotransduction [157] and initiates intracellular calcium release. The P2X7 nucleotide receptor is an ATP-gated ion channel expressed in many cell types, but appears to play a role in skeletal mechanotransduction [158]. Deletion of this receptor results in mice with an attenuated inflammatory response and reduced bone formation [159]. Macrophages from these animals do not release interleukin (IL)-1 in response to ATP. Skeletal sensitivity to mechanical loading was reduced about 70% in these null mice [158]. Fluid flow shear stress did not induce PG release in cells isolated from these mice. Blockers of P2X7 receptors suppressed PG release, whereas agonists enhance release in MC3T3 osteoblast and MLO-Y4 osteocyte cells. The authors conclude that P2X7 receptor is necessary for release of PG in response to mechanical load. Clearly, PG is a bone anabolic factor and osteocytes produce PG in response to load. PGs are generally thought to be skeletal anabolic agents as their administration can increase bone mass in humans and animals [160,161], stimulate bone formation in vitro in organ culture [162], and increase nodule formation in rat calvarial osteoblasts [163]. Primary osteocytes and primary calvarial bone cells have been shown to release PGs in response to fluid flow treatment [164]. A number of studies have suggested that osteocytes are the primary source of these load-induced PGs [113,165]. In vivo studies have shown that new bone formation induced by loading can be blocked by the PG inhibitor, indomethacin [166] and that it is the inducible cyclo-oxygenase (COX)-2 pathway that is primarily involved. PG receptor agonists have been shown to increase new bone formation [167]. However, others have found that COX-2-null mice still

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Osteocyte Signals for Bone Resorption

respond to mechanotransduction [168]. These authors suggested compensation through COX-1 elevation. It was hypothesized as early as 2002 that Lrp5 is a major player in the way that bone cells sense and respond to mechanical load [169]. These investigators were responsible for the discovery of the high bone mass (HBM) gene, a mutation in the Lrp5 receptor [170] (see also Chapter 18). They reasoned that the HBM mutation results in a skeleton that is overadapted in relation to the actual loads being applied, but yet the skeleton is in homeostatic equilibrium. They found that wild-type bone experienced 40% greater strain than HBM bone with the same load. Based on these observations in humans and mice, they hypothesized that the set-point for load responsiveness was lower in the HBM skeleton. Loss of function mutations in Lrp5 result in low bone mass [171], but more importantly, the bones do not respond to mechanical load [172] again supporting the notion that Lrp5 is involved in mechanosensation. It was the discovery that Lrp5 could regulate bone mass which brought attention to the Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway in the maintenance of bone mass. Not only are positive regulators of bone formation produced by osteocytes, but also negative regulators such as Dickkopf (Dkk)1 and sclerostin. These components of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway in addition to Lrp5 have been shown to have major effects on bone mass. Whereas Dkk1 is expressed in many cell types, sclerostin is mainly expressed in osteocytes [52] and articular hypertrophic chondrocytes [173]. It has been proposed that downregulation of Dkk1 and Sost create a permissive environment in which Wnt proteins already present can activate the Wnt pathway (for review see Bonewald [4]). Targeted deletion of β-catenin in either osteoblasts or osteocytes has dramatic effects on bone. Deletion in osteocytes results in a bone phenotype of severe osteoporosis with a “moth-eaten” appearance [174]. These investigators found that β-catenin is required for the expression of the antiosteoclastogenic factor osteoprotegerin (OPG) in osteocytes and that osteocytes express RANKL and OPG at levels exceeding those expressed by osteoblasts supporting the concept that that osteocytes can recruit osteoclasts. β-Catenin may also maintain bone mass by protecting osteocyte viability and preventing osteocyte apoptosis [175]. Mechanical loading of MLO-Y4 cells by fluid flow shear stress protects against dexamethasoneinduced apoptosis through induction of PGE2 cross-talk with the β-catenin signaling pathway [176]. Both PGE2 and fluid flow shear stress result in increased phosphorylation of glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)-3β and β-catenin nuclear translocation [129]. In addition to playing a role in osteocyte viability in response to shear stress, the β-catenin pathway is important in osteocyte communication. β-Catenin binds to the Cx43 promoter,

219

stimulating Cx43 expression and functional gap junctions between osteocytes [177]. The estrogen receptor alfa isoform (ER-α) may play a role in shuttling β-catenin into the nucleus in response to mechanical strain [178]. This may in part explain how estrogen regulates bone mass through cross-talk between ER-α with Wnt/βcatenin signaling. Estrogen has been proposed to modulate skeletal response to strain. Ehrlich and coworkers found that about 14% of all osteocytes were positive for ER-α under normal locomotion, but this number was decreased to 7.5% after a 2-week loading regimen that results in new bone formation in rat ulnae [87]. The distribution of positive cells was uniform and did not correlate with peak strain magnitude suggesting that osteocytes respond to strain as a population. The response of mice deficient in ER-α and ER-β is inadequate to mechanical loading [179,180]. It has been proposed that TGFβ III present in MLO-Y4 conditioned media enhances the production of estrogen which inhibits osteoclastic bone resorption [181]. Conditioned media from osteocyte-like MLO-Y4 cells has also been shown to stimulate the proliferation of mesenchymal stem cells selectively and their differentiation into osteoblasts, but the factors responsible are not known [182]. Estrogen has also been proposed to be an antiapoptotic factor for osteocytes (see section below).

OSTEOCYTE SIGNALS FOR BONE RESORPTION Power and coworkers found elevated osteocyte density and lacunar occupancy in resorbing and forming osteons compared to quiescent osteons, leading to their conclusion that osteocytes may contribute to processes initiating or maintaining bone resorption [183]. Isolated avian osteocytes have been shown to support osteoclast formation and activation [184]. Like isolated chick osteocytes, the osteocyte-like cell line, MLO-Y4, was also found to support osteoclast formation, however, unlike any previously reported stromal cell lines, did so in the absence of any osteotropic factors [185]. These cells express RANKL along their dendritic processes and secrete large amounts of macrophage colony stimulating factor, both essential for osteoclast formation. Expression of RANKL along osteocyte dendritic processes provides a potential means for osteocytes within bone to interact and stimulate osteoclast precursors at the bone surface. It is interesting that MLO-Y4 cells can both support mesenchymal stem cell differentiation and osteoblast differentiation and also support osteoclast formation. It remains to be determined if primary osteocytes can perform all three functions. If so, this supports the hypothesis that osteocytes have the capacity to regulate all phases of bone remodeling.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

220

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

It was previously thought that osteoblasts were responsible for osteoclast formation and activation through expression of RANKL. However when RANKL expression was detected in osteocytes in vivo [186,187] and MLO-Y4 cells in vitro [185,188,189], it was still not accepted that osteocytes could perform this function. The importance of osteocytes in regulating osteoclastic activity was confirmed in elegant in vivo studies performed by Xiong et al. [95] and Nakashima et al. [190], in which RANKL was deleted specifically in osteocytes. These mouse models developed an osteopetrotic phenotype, which led the authors to conclude that osteocytederived RANKL is essential for normal bone remodeling in adult mice [95,190]. Osteocytes and MLO-Y4 cells are also known to express OPG, a decoy receptor for RANKL [185,191]. Deletion of β-catenin in osteocytes using Dmp1-Cre resulted in decreased expression of OPG and a subsequent increase in the RANKL/OPG ratio [174]. These mice were characterized by severe osteoporosis, which was a consequence of enhanced osteoclast activity and excessive bone resorption. Therefore, the expression of RANKL and OPG in osteocytes plays a role in regulation of resorption. One of the major means by which osteocytes may support osteoclast activation and formation is through their death. Osteocyte apoptosis can occur at sites of microdamage and it is proposed that dying osteocytes are targeted for removal by osteoclasts. Verborgt and coworkers mapped the expression of an antiapoptotic molecule called Bcl-2 and a proapoptotic molecule called Bax in osteocytes surrounding microcracks [192] and found that Bax was elevated in osteocytes immediately at the microcrack locus, whereas Bcl-2 was expressed 1 to 2 mm from the microcrack. The authors propose that those osteocytes that do not undergo apoptosis are prevented from doing so by active protection mechanisms suggesting that damaged, yet still viable osteocytes can send signals.

OSTEOCYTE APOPTOSIS AND AUTOPHAGY It has been proposed that the purpose and function of osteocytes is to die, thereby releasing signals to stimulate remodeling and serving to target particular skeletal sites at selected time points for resorption [193]. Osteocyte apoptosis can occur by aging, immobilization, microdamage, lack of estrogen, and elevated cytokines, such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF)α, that occur after menopause and during treatment with glucocorticoids. Osteocyte cell death can occur in association with pathological conditions, such as osteoporosis and osteoarthritis, leading to increased skeletal fragility [194–196]. Such fragility is considered to be due to loss of the

ability to sense microdamage and signal to other bone cells for repair [7]. Osteocyte apoptosis has been implicated in targeting the bone remodeling processes, since osteocyte apoptosis occurs in association with areas of microdamage and is followed by osteoclastic resorption in mechanically challenged bone [197]. The apoptotic region around microcracks was found to be surrounded by surviving osteocytes expressing Bcl-2 whereas dying ­osteocytes appeared to be the target of resorbing osteoclasts [192,198]. In addition to microdamage, other skeletal insults cause osteocyte apoptosis. Oxygen deprivation has been shown to promote osteocyte apoptosis, especially as seen in immobilization. Hypoxia inducing factor alpha is elevated leading to apoptosis and induction of the osteoclastogenic factor, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) [199] and osteopontin, a mediator of environmental stress and a potential chemoattractant for osteoclasts [200]. Withdrawal of estrogen results in osteocyte apoptosis [201], as does glucocorticoid treatment [195]. These observations are relevant to disease as cytokines such as TNFα and IL-1 have been reported to increase with estrogen deficiency [202,203]. Apoptosis may also play an important role in the third most common cause of osteoporosis, glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis [7]. Several agents found to reduce or inhibit osteoblast and osteocyte apoptosis include estrogen and selective estrogen receptor modulators [204], bisphosphonates and calcitonin [205], CD40 ligand [206], and calbindin-D28k [207]. The pathways for some of these antiapoptosis agents have been extensively studied ­ and dissected. For example, bisphosphonates appear to inhibit apoptosis through interaction with hemichannels and the ERK pathway [208] and Fas/CD95 plays a role in glucocorticoid-induced osteocyte apoptosis [209]. Hence osteocyte viability may play a significant role in the maintenance of bone homeostasis and integrity. However, whereas blocking osteocyte apoptosis may improve conditions such as bone loss due to aging or to glucocorticoid therapy, osteocyte apoptosis may be essential for damage repair and normal skeletal ­replacement. Any agents that block this process may exacerbate conditions in which repair is required. The osteocyte is generally a long-lived cell, surviving for decades within the bone microenvironment. Therefore, this cell must possess mechanisms to maintain viability under conditions of stress. Xia and coworkers were the first to propose that osteocytes may undergo autophagy in response to stress such as glucocorticoid treatment [210]. They showed that glucocorticoid was associated with induction of markers and organelles associated with autophagy in osteocytes. Autophagy (“auto”, self; “phagy”, eat) is a mechanism by which the cell selectively degrades its own cytoplasm and selective

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Osteocyte Modification of Their Microenvironment

organelles in an attempt to stay alive under conditions of stress. It is a tightly regulated process of lysosomal “self degradation” in which the cell degrades and recycles ­nonessential cellular components to reuse them in processes necessary for survival. Autophagy can therefore protect cells from apoptosis thereby preserving viability until the stress can be relieved. However, should the stress not be relieved, the outcome can be cell death. Other investigators have also shown glucocorticoid induced osteocyte autophagy in vivo [211], where it was shown that low-dose glucocorticoid-induced autophagy and high-dose glucocorticoid induced apoptosis. Targeted deletion of the autophagy gene, ATG7, using the Dmp1-Cre driver, was shown to reduce autophagy in osteocytes, resulting in mice with low bone mass [212]. These data suggest that the long-lived osteocyte requires autophagy to survive not only stressful conditions, but just to survive for decades within its enclosed environment.

OSTEOCYTE MODIFICATION OF THEIR MICROENVIRONMENT In 1910, Von Recklinghausen described enlarged lacunae in patients with rickets or osteomalacia and suggested that “pericellular digestion” was occurring [213]. In 1951, it was proposed that osteocytes may resorb their lacunar wall under certain conditions [214]. The term “osteolytic osteolysis” was initially used to describe the enlarged lacunae in patients with hyperparathyroidism [215] and later in immobilized rats [216]. Bonucci and Gherardi [217] suggested that poor mineralization at the time when the osteocyte is being embedded is the reason for enlarged lacunae with renal osteodystrophy. The term “osteocyte halos” was used by Heuck [218] to describe pericanicular demineralization in rickets and later by others to describe periosteocytic lesions in X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets [219], a condition due to an inactivating mutation in Phex. Such periosteocytic lesions are not present in other chronic hypophosphatemic states. “Perilacunar osteolysis” and “osteocytic osteolysis” was also described in animals such as rats sent into space for 22 days [220], and in alveolar bone of hibernating ground squirrels [221], and in breeding female or hibernating snakes [222]. Osteocyte removal of mineral from lacunae and canaliculi has important implications with regard to mineral homeostasis, changes in magnitude of fluid shear stress in bone, and changes in mechanical properties of bone. Glucocorticoids, in addition to having effects on apoptosis, may have direct effects on osteocytes resulting in modification of their microenvironment. It appears that glucocorticoid treated subjects fracture at higher BMD values than postmenopausal women, but the reason is

221

unclear [223,224]. Mice injected with pellets releasing prednisolone showed an enlargement of osteocyte lacunae in trabecular bone and the generation of a surrounding sphere of hypomineralized bone [225]. Lacunae act as stress concentrators in bone, therefore, it was proposed that these highly localized changes in bone properties may influence fracture risk in glucocorticoid-treated patients [225]. It was suggested that glucocorticoids may alter or compromise the metabolism and function of the osteocyte, not just induce cell death. In the early 1960s, it was suggested that the osteocyte not only has the capacity to destroy matrix but also to form matrix [226] and that the osteocyte can remodel its local environment including lacunae and canaliculi [227]. Osteocyte lacunae were shown to uptake tetracycline, called “periosteocytic perilacunar tetracycline labeling” indicating the ability to calcify or form bone. In contrast, these early investigators also found acid phosphatase positive osteocytes near endosteal osteoclastic resorbing surfaces suggesting the potential capacity to resorb. Greater solubility of the intralacunar mineral surrounding the normal osteocyte was also found [215]. Interestingly, Baylink and Wergedal had described tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) activity in osteocytes in 1969 [228], a finding that was criticized as potentially being due to a diffusion artifact from osteoclasts. However this observation was validated by Nakano and co-workers using in-situ hybridization for TRAP gene expression [229]. Baylink and colleagues showed tetracycline binding to the perilacunar matrix, suggesting that osteocytes have the ability to replace their perilacunar matrix [227]. In 1983, Zallone and colleagues also reported tetracycline labeling in osteocyte lacunae in egg-laying hens [230]. These observations suggest that the osteocyte can both add and remove mineral from its lacunae and canaliculi. After the 1960s and 1970s, the concept of “osteocytic osteolysis” began to decline as did the number of publications on the topic (for a review see Qing and Bonewald [231]). One strong argument against “osteolytic osteolysis” was the observation that enlarged lacunae could be found around younger osteocytes due to defective mineralization while embedding [1,232]. Another reason that the concept fell out of favor is because “osteolytic osteolysis” has frequently been confused with the resorption mechanisms used by osteoclasts. When primary avian osteocytes were seeded onto dentin slices, no resorption was detected, therefore these investigators concluded that osteocytes cannot remove mineralized matrix [233]. However, it must be remembered that removal of mineral by osteocytes (weeks/months) would certainly be slower than osteoclastic resorption (days) and therefore not detectable using this approach. It must also be kept in mind that the osteocyte cannot form a resorption lacuna complete with sealing zone, but it does reside within a lacuna.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

222

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

It has been shown that osteocyte lacunar area increases with lactation and returns to normal with forced weaning [234]. Genes thought to be osteoclast specific such as TRAP and cathepsin K were found to be elevated in osteocytes during lactation and returned to normal with weaning. parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP), which is known to be elevated in the circulation during lactation, was found to reproduce these effects on lacunar enlargement and confirmed to be mediated through the PTH type 1 receptor. No effect on lacunar size was observed in the hind limbs of tail-suspended mice, suggesting that removal of osteocyte perilacunar matrix is not initiated in response to unloading, but is responsive to hormonal regulation. This study shows that healthy osteocytes can both remove and replace their perilacunar matrix during normal reproductive function, suggesting that osteocytes play an important role in mineral homeostasis during a calcium-demanding condition such as lactation. It was suggested that “osteocytic osteolysis” be reserved for pathological conditions, whereas the term “perilacunar remodeling” be used for the function of the healthy osteocyte such as in the lactating animal. In summary an old observation by early “pioneers” has now been validated with modern research approaches.

OSTEOCYTE REGULATION OF PHOSPHATE METABOLISM Osteocytes appear to regulate phosphate and biomineralization through molecules such as PHEX, DMP1, and MEPE [235], all highly expressed in osteocytes [236–238]. These three molecules have well-characterized effects on the skeletal system, as demonstrated by loss of function mutations and knockout mouse models [21,23,38,42,239]. Dmp1-null mice have a similar phenotype to hypophosphatemic (Hyp) mice carrying a Phex mutation, that of osteomalacia and rickets due to elevated FGF23 levels in osteocytes [42,240] whereas the MEPE null mice have increased bone mass [23]. The human condition, autosomal-dominant hypophosphatemic rickets, is due to mutations in PHEX [38] and autosomal-recessive hypophosphatemic rickets is due to mutations in DMP1 [42]. In the absence of either DMP1 or PHEX, FGF23 is dramatically elevated in the osteocyte and in the circulation, leading to phosphate excretion by the kidney thereby reducing circulating phosphate levels and resulting in osteomalacia and rickets. FGF23 is not normally expressed at high levels in osteocytes but is dramatically upregulated in both DMP1- and PHEX-associated hypophosphatemic rickets [39] and in chronic kidney disease (CKD) [241]. Based on these observations, it was proposed that the osteocyte lacunocanalicular network can function as an endocrine system, targeting distant organs such as kidney [42].

The exact mechanism(s) by which DMP1 and PHEX regulate FGF23 are yet to be determined, however, research has suggested that their inhibitory effects are mediated by FGF receptor (FGFR) signaling [242]. DMP1-null and Hyp mouse models show enhanced FGFR signaling compared to wild-type control mice and inhibition of FGR signaling resulting in reduction of FGF23 in the bone marrow stromal cells from both mouse models. The effects of MEPE on FGF23 and matrix mineralization are variable and dependent on release of an acidic serine aspartate-rich MEPE-associated motif (ASARM) from its C-terminus. This 19 amino acid ASARM peptide is known to be a potent inhibitor of mineralization in vivo and absence of this peptide in MEPE-null mice may be the reason these mice have increased bone mass and mineral apposition rate with aging. MEPE and the MEPE ASARM peptide can have different effects. Binding of MEPE to PHEX prevents its proteolytic degradation and the release of the ASARM peptide [48] preventing downregulation of FGF23. The ASARM peptide is known to bind specifically to PHEX in vitro [48] to inhibit PHEX enzymatic activity [39], which results in upregulation of FGF23 expression. In addition, the phosphorylated MEPE-ASARM peptide itself is a substrate for PHEX, with cleavage of ASARM by PHEX neutralizing its activity and restoring mineralization [243]. This is a very complex regulatory system and requires further study. Since its identification in 2000 in the ventrolateral thalamic nucleus of the brain [244], FGF23 has actually been found to be most highly expressed in bone, predominantly in the osteocyte [42,238,245]. In addition to being regulated by Dmp1, PHEX, and MEPE, 1,25(OH)2D induces expression of Fgf23 in the osteocyte as shown in murine [238] and cell culture models [85,238], suggesting a negative feedback system. In addition to 1,25(OH)2D, PTH may directly regulate FGF23 levels. Infusion of PTH in mice resulted in increased FGF23 mRNA expression in the calvaria and increased serum FGF23 [246]. PTH was also shown to upregulate expression of FGF23 mRNA in UMR106 cells. Rhee and colleagues observed an increase in FGF23 expression in osteocytes in transgenic mice with constitutive activation of the PTH receptor (PTHR1) in osteocytes under control of the DMP1 promoter [247]. The consequences and implications of elevated FGF23 in disease will be covered below.

ROLE OF GAP JUNCTIONS AND HEMICHANNELS IN OSTEOCYTE COMMUNICATION Clearly, osteocytes can communicate extracellularly through the production of small molecules such as NO, ATP, PGs, and secretion of larger proteins such as DMP1,

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Osteocytes in the Embryonic and the Adult Skeleton

MEPE, and sclerostin. Turner and colleagues have suggested that bone cells may communicate in a fashion similar to neural cells [65] through molecules such as glutamate, serotonin, leptin, and neuropeptide Y2 that are responsible for habituation, sensitization, and longterm memory. Osteocytes do not express functional glutamate receptor, but do express GLAST, a molecule that sequesters glutamate, suggesting that the osteocyte may signal to responding osteoblasts and osteoclasts that do express the receptor [248]. Serotonin receptors have also been found on osteocytes, the 5-HT(2B) receptor is higher on avian osteocytes than osteoblasts [249] and serotonin has been shown to increase BMD [250]. Though intriguing to view bone as a neuronal network, further studies are required. Another means by which osteocytes communicate is intracellularly through gap junctions. The cell processes of osteocytes are connected with each other and with cells on the bone surface via gap junctions [251,252], thereby allowing direct cell-to-cell coupling. Gap junctions are transmembrane channels, which connect the cytoplasm of two adjacent cells. These channels permit molecules with molecular weights less than 1 kDa to pass through and have been shown to modulate cell signaling and tissue function in many organs and cells. Gap junction channels are formed by members of a family of proteins known as connexins. Functional gap junctions in osteoblasts were first identified by injection of fluorescent dye into rat calvarial subperiosteal osteoblasts that spread to neighboring osteoblastic cells [253]. Gap junctions and Cx43 are important for osteoblast differentiation, and the functions and expression of gap junctions and Cx43 are regulated by PGs, hormones, and other signaling molecules. Cx43-null mice have delayed ossification, craniofacial abnormalities, and osteoblast dysfunction [254]. It has been proposed that gap junctions function through the propagation of intracellular signals contributing to mechanotransduction in bone, thereby regulating bone cell differentiation [255]. A dominant negative mutant of Cx43 diminishes fluid flow-induced release of PGE2, but not Ca2+ responses [256]. In addition, the fluid flow-induced PGE2 response of osteoblastic ROS17/2.8 cells is gap junction-mediated and independent of intracellular Ca2+ [257]. Fluid flow-induced shear stress stimulates gap junction-mediated intercellular communication and increases Cx43 expression in osteocyte-like MLO-Y4 cells [258]. PGE2 released in response to fluid flow functions in an autocrine fashion to activate EP2 receptor signaling, including increased intracellular cAMP and activated protein kinase A (PKA), which in turn, stimulates gap junction function and Cx43 expression [259]. Oscillating fluid flow has been shown to upregulate gap junction communication in MLO-Y4 cells by an ERK1/2 MAP kinase-dependent mechanism [260]. Yellowley and coworkers have shown that the osteocyte-like MLO-Y4

223

cells can couple through gap junctions to osteoblast-like MC3T3 cells [261]. Hemichannels were identified in osteocytes in addition to other potential openings or channels to the extracellular bone fluid such as calcium-, ion-, voltage-, and stretch-activated channels [262,263]. Osteocytes and MLO-Y4 osteocyte-like cells [81] express large amounts of Cx43, the component of gap junctions, but these cells are only in contact through the tips of their dendritic processes. This raised the question of how Cx43 located in the rest of the cell membrane could be functioning. Connexins can form and function as unapposed halves of gap junction channels called hemichannels, localized at the cell surface, independent of physical contact with adjacent cells [264]. Functional hemichannels formed by Cx43 has been reported in neural progenitor cells and neurons, astrocytes, heart, and osteoblasts and osteocytes. The opening of hemichannels appears to provide a mechanism for ATP and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) release, which raises intracellular Ca2+ levels and promotes Ca2+-wave propagation in astrocytes, bone cells, epithelial cells, and outer retina. Hemichannels expressed in bone cells such as MLO-Y4 cells, appear to function as essential transducers of the antiapoptotic effects of bisphosphonates [265]. Hemichannels formed by Cx43 directly serve as the pathway for the exit of elevated intracellular PGE2 in osteocytes induced by fluid flow shear stress [266]. This is the first report of modulation of hemichannel function in response to mechanical stress. Therefore, gap junctions at the tip of dendrites appear to mediate a form of intracellular communication and hemichannels along the dendrite appear to mediate a form of extracellular communication in osteocytes. It has been shown that integrin α5β1 interacts with Cx43 [149] to mediate the opening of hemichannels in response to mechanical stimulation that is responsible for the regulation and extracellular release of PG. A focus has been on the role of Cx43 on PG release, but clearly gap junctions and hemichannels are intercellular and extracellular portals for other unknown signaling molecules.

OSTEOCYTES IN THE EMBRYONIC AND THE ADULT SKELETON Mechanical strain is absolutely required for postnatal, but less for prenatal skeletal development and maintenance as excised embryonic metatarsals will continue to develop ex vivo. Mice lacking Dmp1, Phex, MEPE, Sost, and other proteins that are highly expressed in osteocytes do not show a phenotype until days to weeks or even months after birth [23,267,268]. One potential explanation for this is that functional osteocytes are not required in the embryo. Osteocytes may act as “place holders”

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

224

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

in the embryo until they can assume their functions as mechanosensors in the postnatal or adult skeleton. Also, in utero, although subjected to some mechanical loading via muscle insertions, the skeleton is not subjected to significant loading from weight-bearing activity. Therefore responses of load-related bone remodeling are less significant in the developing embryo. Growth and development are the overriding signals prenatally compared to any loading or unloading signals. Their extensive dendrite connections also may not be required because the bone cortices and trabeculae are relatively thin and poorly mineralized and the cells are near the surface [269]. Thus nutrients may be able to diffuse readily to the osteocytes without requiring an extensive canalicular system. Therefore, molecules that play a role in the responses of osteocytes to mechanical strain may not reveal their importance for normal skeletal physiology until postnatally or in the adult animal. Osteocyte biology and function may be more relevant to adult disease than to development. It is not clear if a relationship exists between osteocyte density and bone volume and remodeling. Jordan and coworkers hypothesized that in cases of osteoarthritis, increased TGFβ may decrease the conversion of osteoblasts to osteocytes, thereby decreasing osteocyte density and increasing bone mass [270] based on studies showing that inactivation of the TGFβ pathway lead to the opposite effects [271]. They examined patients with coxarthrosis known to have elevated TGFβ and found a reduction in osteocyte lacunar density and an increase in wall width in femoral neck biopsies consistent with their prediction. These observations support those of Karsdal [8] showing that osteoblast lifespan and matrix production before incorporation into matrix as an osteocyte appears to be regulated by TGFβ. In contrast, Vashishth and coworkers found that increasing osteocyte density was associated with increases in bone volume and that osteocyte lacunar density predicts cancellous and cortical bone volume [272]. Qiu and coworkers found a correlation of increased osteocyte density with less bone remodeling [273,274]. They found that osteocyte density declines with age but not with menopause, in deep bone but not superficial bone and suggest that it is the age of the bone and not the age of the subject that determines osteocyte density. They propose that one function of remodeling is to maintain osteocyte viability. They also found that fracture patients had fewer osteocytes before fracture than healthy controls [275] and conclude that osteocyte deficiency may contribute to bone fragility by impairing osteocyte detection of microdamage or by a reduction in canalicular fluid flow. These authors also found that black women have higher osteocyte density than white women [276], perhaps playing a role in increased bone strength. In black women, as in white women, more empty lacunae were found in deep than

in superficial bone and there was age related loss of osteocytes. Robling and Turner did not find a correlation between osteocyte density and mechanosensitivity in three strains of mice. They suggest that genetic components other than osteocyte density regulate mechanosensitivity [277]. Clearly, further study is required to clarify the importance of osteocyte density in osteocyte function in bone.

THE IMPLICATIONS OF OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY FOR BONE DISEASE Osteocyte connectivity and lacunocanalicular organization may play a role in bone disease. The early ­formation of dendrites by embedding osteoid-osteocytes is polarized toward the mineralization front to which cellular processes are oriented. Cellular processes oriented toward blood vessels only begin to appear when the mineralization begins to spread around the cell [11]. Osteocyte dendricity changes depending on orientation and with static and dynamic bone formation [278]. In undiseased bone, osteocyte connectivity is high and the processes are oriented in the direction of the blood supply [279]. In osteoporotic bone there is a marked decrease in connectivity as well as disorientation of the dendrites which increases with severity [279]. In contrast, in osteoarthritic bone, a decrease in connectivity is observed, but the orientation is intact. In osteomalacic bone, the osteocytes appear viable with high connectivity, but the processes are distorted and the network chaotic [279]. Changes in osteocyte dendricity could not only have a dramatic effect on osteocyte function and viability, but also on the mechanical properties of bone. An equilibrium must be met between number and branching of dendrites to preserve function and viability versus the number that would decrease bone strength (Fig. 10.5).

Reduced

Normal

Enhanced

FIGURE 10.5  The effects of lacuno-canalicular system complexity on bone mass or health is not known. Complexity may increase with age of the animal. Disruptions to this system may occur with disease [279]. Theoretically, changes in osteocyte dendricity would have a dramatic effect on osteocyte function and viability and on the mechanical properties of bone.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

The Implications of Osteocyte Biology for Bone Disease

Osteonecrosis is “dead” bone that does not remodel. As the osteocytes are dead or missing in necrotic bone and as necrotic bone does not remodel, this suggests that viable osteocytes are necessary to initiate (re)modeling. Osteonecrosis can be caused by glucocorticoid treatment, lipid disorders, alcohol abuse, radiation, trauma, sickle cell anemia, and bisphosphonate-related osteonecrosis of the jaw has been described. Proposed mechanisms responsible for osteonecrosis include: 1) mechanical theory = osteoporosis and the accumulation of unhealed trabecular microcracks resulting in fatigue fractures, 2) vascular theory = ischemia is caused by microscopic fat emboli. Increased intraosseous pressure due to fat accumulation leads to a mechanical impingement on the sinusoidal vascular bed and decreased blood flow, and a new theory, 3) osteocyte apoptosis = agents induce osteocyte cell death which results in dead bone that does not remodel. There are a number of articles supporting the mechanism of a lack of vascular supply due to microcracks or fat emboli [280–282], however there are more recent articles suggesting that the osteocyte is the target [195,283–285]. If these conditions are mediated through osteocyte cell death, then therapeutics to prevent this occurrence are likely to be beneficial. Osteocyte viability may play a significant role in the maintenance and integrity of bone. Bone loss due to osteoporosis may be due in part to osteocyte cell death [7,193]. Manolagas and coworkers have been pioneers in dissecting out the mechanisms and signaling pathways of factors such as estrogens, bisphosphonates, and PTH on osteoblast and osteocyte viability and of glucocorticoid on osteoblast and osteocyte apoptosis. Osteocyte cell death is observed in patients with steroid and alcohol-induced osteonecrosis of the femoral neck [195,285], after renal transplant, possibly due to glucocorticoids and other immunosuppressives, and with high dose bisphosphonates resulting in in osteonecrosis of the jaw [286]. Osteocyte cell death is elevated in inflammatory disease resulting in decreased bone mass inflammatory disease such as Crohn disease [287]. Clearly prevention of osteocyte cell death could prevent bone loss or osteonecrosis, thereby also warranting the development of such therapeutics. As osteoid osteocytes and mature osteocytes regulate mineralization and phosphate homeostasis, they play a major role in hypophosphatemia. As stated above Dmp1-null mice have a similar phenotype to Hyp mice in which Phex is mutated and both models are osteomalacic with elevated FGF23 levels due to high expression in osteocytes [240]. If the osteocyte lacunocanalicular system is as an endocrine organ regulating phosphate metabolism, the unraveling of the interactions of these molecules should lead to insight into diseases of hyper and hypophosphatemia, as well as renal and cardiovascular disease. Elevated levels of circulating FGF23 are

225

associated with hypophosphatemia, CKD, and vascular disease. Elevated FGF23 lead to increased renal phosphate excretion and subsequent hypophosphatemia and osteomalacia [288,289]. Treatment with FGF23 antibody restored serum phosphate levels in the Hyp mouse model and corrected the osteomalacic phenotype [290] and treatment of Dmp1-null mice with an FGF23 antibody ameliorated the bone defects by increasing levels of circulating phosphate [269]. In CKD, serum levels of FGF23 are increased, particularly in the later stages of the disease [291]. High serum FGF23 levels have been linked with atherosclerosis [292], ventricular hypertrophy [293,294], increased risk of cardiovascular disease [295], and vascular calcification [296]. Treatments targeting FGF23 provide significant therapeutic potential and not only for bone disease but also other chronic diseases. The osteocyte may be the major target of excessive PTH that results in hyperparathyroidism. Osteoclast activity is elevated, which may be due to elevated RANKL, not just on bone surface cells, but also embedded osteocytes. With studies suggesting that osteocytes are a major source of RANKL and OPG in vivo [95,189], it seems likely that the detrimental effects of continuous PTH on bone are mediated, at least partly, by the osteocyte. Bone disease in a mouse model of secondary hyperparathyroidism could be reversed by treatment with OPG [297]. Targeted upregulation of OPG in osteocytes could counteract the negative effects of hyperparathyroidism. Conversely, the effects of intermittent PTH treatment, known to be anabolic, may be mediated through downregulation of osteocyte-expressed sclerostin. Overexpression of Sost in a mouse model prevented the anabolic effects of intermittent PTH administration [174]. Sclerostin itself has become a very attractive target for therapeutics to increase bone mass. Monoclonal antibodies to sclerostin were shown to protect against bone loss due to hind-limb immobilization in a rat model [60], increased bone formation and mineral density in cynomolgus monkey [298], and increased the expression of bone formation markers such as alkaline phosphatase, decreased markers of bone resorption, and led to gains of up to 5.3% and 2.8% in BMD in the human vertebrae and hip, respectively [61]. The antibody also reversed bone loss after dexamethasone treatment in mice [299]. Sclerostin antibody has promise for orthopedic application as it has also been shown enhance bone regeneration and be useful for the treatment of fractures [62]. The role of osteocytes in cancer-induced bone disease is unknown except for multiple myeloma. Bones in these patients have an increase in osteocyte apoptosis resulting in a decrease in viable osteocytes [18] thought to be potentially responsible for increased osteoclast activation resulting in osteolytic lesions. Sclerostin is e­ levated in multiple myeloma patients and correlates with decreased bone mass [300]. In addition to sclerostin,

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

226

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

other Wnt signaling inhibitors, such as DKK1 and soluble Frizzled-related protein, sFRP1, are also known to be involved in myeloma-induced bone destruction [301,302]. Therefore, the osteocyte may be a source of these factors in multiple myeloma disease.

CONCLUSIONS Bone histomorphologists in the 1940s through the late 1960s were pioneers who generated novel hypotheses regarding the function of osteocytes using only histological observations, their intellect, and their imaginations. Now technology has allowed further observation, further validation of decades-old hypotheses, has allowed novel extensions of earlier work, and has generated totally unexpected discoveries. Evidence is accumulating that osteocytes are important for bone health as well as that of other nonskeletal tissues. Therefore a revival of interest in this cell is occurring within the bone community. These fascinating cells continue to challenge and stimulate.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT The author’s work in osteocyte biology is supported by the National Institutes of Health AR-46798.

References [1]  Parfitt AM. The cellular basis of bone turnover and bone loss: a rebuttal of the osteocytic resorption – bone flow theory. Clin Orthop Relat Res 1977;127:236–47. [2]  Lanyon LE. Osteocytes, strain detection, bone modeling and ­remodeling. Calcif Tissue Int 1993;53(Suppl. 1):S102–6. [3]  Kamioka H, Honjo T, Takano-Yamamoto T. A three-dimensional distribution of osteocyte processes revealed by the combination of confocal laser scanning microscopy and differential interference contrast microscopy. Bone 2001;28(2):145–9. [4]  Bonewald LF. The amazing osteocyte. J Bone Miner Res 2011;26(2):229–38. [5]  Kalajzic I, Kalajzic Z, Kaliterna M, Gronowicz G, Clark SH, ­Lichtler AC, et al. Use of type I collagen green fluorescent protein transgenes to identify subpopulations of cells at different stages of the osteoblast lineage. J Bone Miner Res 2002;17(1):15–25. [6]  Kalajzic I, Braut A, Guo D, Jiang X, Kronenberg MS, Mina M, et al. Dentin matrix protein 1 expression during osteoblastic differentiation, generation of an osteocyte GFP-transgene. Bone 2004;35(1):74–82. [7]  Manolagas SC. Birth and death of bone cells: basic regulatory mechanisms and implications for the pathogenesis and treatment of osteoporosis. Endocr Rev 2000;21(2):115–37. [8]  Karsdal MA, Larsen L, Engsig MT, Lou H, Ferreras M, Lochter A, et al. Matrix metalloproteinase-dependent activation of l­ atent transforming growth factor-beta controls the conversion of ­osteoblasts into osteocytes by blocking osteoblast apoptosis. J Biol Chem 2002;277(46):44061–7. [9]  Bordier PJ, Miravet L, Ryckerwaert A, Rasmussen H. Morphological and morphometrical characteristics of the ­mineralization

front. A vitamin D regulated sequence of bone remodeling. In: Meunier PJ, editor. Bone Histomorphometry. Paris: Armour Montagu; 1976. p. 335–54. [10]  Nijweide PJ, van der Plas A, Scherft JP. Biochemical and histological studies on various bone cell preparations. Calcif Tissue Int 1981;33(5):529–40. [11]  Palumbo C. A three-dimensional ultrastructural study of osteoidosteocytes in the tibia of chick embryos. Cell Tissue Res 1986;246(1):125–31. [12]  Owen M. Cell population kinetics of an osteogenic tissue. I. 1963. Clin Orthop Relat Res 1995;313:3–7. [13]  Imai S, Heino TJ, Hienola A, Kurata K, Buki K, Matsusue Y, et al. Osteocyte-derived HB-GAM (pleiotrophin) is associated with bone formation and mechanical loading. Bone 2009;44(5): 785–94. [14]  Franz-Odendaal TA, Hall BK, Witten PE. Buried alive: how ­osteoblasts become osteocytes. Dev Dyn 2006;235(1):176–90. [15]  Dallas SL, Bonewald LF. Dynamics of the transition from osteoblast to osteocyte. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2010;1192(1):437–43. [16]  Kato Y, Boskey A, Spevak L, Dallas M, Hori M, Bonewald LF. Establishment of an osteoid preosteocyte-like cell MLO-A5 that spontaneously mineralizes in culture. J Bone Miner Res 2001;16(9):1622–33. [17]  Barragan-Adjemian C, Nicolella D, Dusevich V, Dallas MR, Eick JD, Bonewald LF. Mechanism by which MLO-A5 late osteoblasts/early osteocytes mineralize in culture: similari­ ties with mineralization of lamellar bone. Calcif Tissue Int 2006;79(5):340–53. [18]  Mikuni-Takagaki Y, Kakai Y, Satoyoshi M, Kawano E, Suzuki Y, Kawase T, et al. Matrix mineralization and the differentiation of osteocyte-like cells in culture. J Bone Miner Res. 1995;10(2): 231–42. [19]  Boskey A. Matrix proteins and mineralization: an overview. Connect Tissue Res 1996;35:357–63. [20]  Hunter GK, Hauschka PV, Poole AR, Rosenberg LC, Goldberg HA. Nucleation and inhibition of hydroxyapatite formation by mineralized tissue proteins. Biochem J 1996;317(Pt 1):59–64. [21]  Strom TM, Francis F, Lorenz B, Boddrich A, Econs MJ, L ­ ehrach H, et al. Pex gene deletions in Gy and Hyp mice provide mouse models for X-linked hypophosphatemia. Hum Mol Genet 1997;6(2):165–71. [22]  Winkler DG, Sutherland MK, Geoghegan JC, Yu C, Hayes T, Skonier JE, et al. Osteocyte control of bone formation via sclerostin, a novel BMP antagonist. EMBO J 2003;22(23):6267–76. [23]  Gowen LC, Petersen DN, Mansolf AL, Qi H, Stock JL, Tkalcevic GT, et al. Targeted disruption of the osteoblast/osteocyte factor 45 gene (OF45) results in increased bone formation and bone mass. J Biol Chem 2003;278(3):1998–2007. [24]  Mikuni-Takagaki Y, Suzuki Y, Kawase T, Saito S. Distinct ­responses of different populations of bone cells to mechanical stress. Endocrinology 1996;137(5):2028–35. [25]  Wetterwald A, Hoffstetter W, Cecchini MG, Lanske B, Wagner C, Fleisch H, et al. Characterization and cloning of the E11 antigen, a marker expressed by rat osteoblasts and osteocytes. Bone 1996;18(2):125–32. [26]  Schulze E, Witt M, Kasper M, Lowik CW, Funk RH. Immunohistochemical investigations on the differentiation marker protein E11 in rat calvaria, calvaria cell culture and the osteoblastic cell line ROS 17/2.8. Histochem Cell Biol 1999;111(1):61–9. [27]  Tenorio D, Cruchley A, Hughes FJ. Immunocytochemical investigation of the rat cementoblast phenotype. J Periodontal Res 1993;28(6 Pt 1):411–9. [28]  Zhang K, Barragan-Adjemian C, Ye L, Kotha S, Dallas M, Lu Y, et al. E11/gp38 selective expression in osteocytes: regulation by mechanical strain and role in dendrite elongation. Mol Cell Biol 2006;26(12):4539–52.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Acknowledgment

[29]  Sprague LWA, Heinzman U, Atkinson MJ. Phenotypic changes following over-expression of sense or antisense E11 cDNA in ROS 17/2.8 cells. J Bone Miner Res 1996;11(Suppl. 1):S132. [30]  Scholl FG, Gamallo C, Vilar S, Quintanilla M. Identification of PA2.26 antigen as a novel cell-surface mucin-type glycoprotein that induces plasma membrane extensions and increased motility in keratinocytes. J Cell Sci 1999;112(Pt 24):4601–13. [31]  Mangeat P, Roy C, Martin M. ERM proteins in cell adhesion and membrane dynamics. Trends Cell Biol 1999;9(5):187–92. [32]  Ohizumi I, Harada N, Taniguchi K, Tsutsumi Y, Nakagawa S, Kaiho S, et al. Association of CD44 with OTS-8 in tumor vascular endothelial cells. Biochim Biophys Acta 2000;1497(2):197–203. [33]  Hughes DE, Salter DM, Simpson R. CD44 expression in human bone: a novel marker of osteocytic differentiation. J Bone Miner Res 1994;9(1):39–44. [34]  Weber GF, Ashkar S, Glimcher MJ, Cantor H. Receptor-ligand interaction between CD44 and osteopontin (Eta-1). Science 1996;271(5248):509–12. [35]  Guo D, Keightley A, Guthrie J, Veno PA, Harris SE, Bonewald LF. Identification of osteocyte-selective proteins. Proteomics 2010; 10(20):3688–98. [36]  Westbroek I, De Rooij KE, Nijweide PJ. Osteocyte-specific monoclonal antibody MAb OB7.3 is directed against Phex protein. J Bone Miner Res 2002;17(5):845–53. [37]  Ruchon AF, Tenenhouse HS, Marcinkiewicz M, Siegfried G, Aubin JE, DesGroseillers L, et al. Developmental expression and tissue distribution of Phex protein: effect of the Hyp ­mutation and relationship to bone markers. J Bone Miner Res 2000;15(8):1440–50. [38]  HYP Consortium The. A gene (PEX) with homologies to endopeptidases is mutated in patients with X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets. Nat Genet 1995;11(2):130–6. [39]  Liu S, Tang W, Zhou J, Vierthaler L, Quarles LD. Distinct roles for intrinsic osteocyte abnormalities and systemic factors in regulation of FGF23 and bone mineralization in Hyp mice. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 2007;293(6):E1636–44. [40]  Feng JQ, Zhang J, Dallas SL, Lu Y, Chen S, Tan X, et al. Dentin matrix protein 1, a target molecule for Cbfa1 in bone, is a unique bone marker gene. J Bone Miner Res 2002;17(10):1822–31. [41]  Toyosawa S, Shintani S, Fujiwara T, Ooshima T, Sato A, Ijuhin N, et al. Dentin matrix protein 1 is predominantly expressed in chicken and rat osteocytes but not in osteoblasts. J Bone Miner Res 2001;16(11):2017–26. [42]  Feng JQ, Ward LM, Liu S, Lu Y, Xie Y, Yuan B, et al. Loss of DMP1 causes rickets and osteomalacia and identifies a role for osteocytes in mineral metabolism. Nat Genet 2006;38(11): 1310–5. [43]  He G, George A. Dentin matrix protein 1 immobilized on type I collagen fibrils facilitates apatite deposition in vitro. J Biol Chem 2004;279(12):11649–56. [44]  Lu Y, White KE, Rauch B, Yu X, Yuan B, Xie Y, et al. ­Discovery of DMP1 mutations in patients with autosomal recessive ­hypophosphatemic rickets (ARHR): identity with the Dmp1– null mouse phenotype. J Bone Miner Res 2006;21(Suppl. 1):1062. [45]  Rowe PS, de Zoysa PA, Dong R, Wang HR, White KE, et al. MEPE, a new gene expressed in bone marrow and tumors causing osteomalacia. Genomics 2000;67(1):54–68. [46]  Petersen DN, Tkalcevic GT, Mansolf AL, Rivera-Gonzalez R, Brown TA. Identification of osteoblast/osteocyte factor 45 (OF45), a bone-specific cDNA encoding an RGD-containing protein that is highly expressed in osteoblasts and osteocytes. J Biol Chem 2000;275(46):36172–80. [47]  Bresler D, Bruder J, Mohnike K, Fraser WD, Rowe PS. Serum MEPE-ASARM-peptides are elevated in X-linked rickets (HYP): implications for phosphaturia and rickets. J Endocrinol 2004;183(3):R1–9.

227

[48]  Rowe PS, Garrett IR, Schwarz PM, Carnes DL, Lafer EM, ­Mundy GR, et al. Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) confirms that MEPE binds to PHEX via the MEPE-ASARM motif: a model for impaired mineralization in X-linked rickets (HYP). Bone 2005;36(1):33–46. [49]  Rowe PS, Kumagai Y, Gutierrez G, Garrett IR, Blacher R, Rosen D, et al. MEPE has the properties of an osteoblastic phosphatonin and minhibin. Bone 2004;34(2):303–19. [50]  Igarashi M, Kamiya N, Ito K, Takagi M. In situ localization and in vitro expression of osteoblast/osteocyte factor 45 mRNA during bone cell differentiation. Histochem J 2002;34(5): 255–63. [51]  Fisher LW, Fedarko NS. Six genes expressed in bones and teeth encode the current members of the SIBLING family of proteins. Connect Tissue Res 2003;44(Suppl. 1):33–40. [52]  Poole KE, van Bezooijen RL, Loveridge N, Hamersma H, ­Papapoulos SE, Lowik CW, et al. Sclerostin is a delayed ­secreted product of osteocytes that inhibits bone formation. FASEB J 2005;19(13):1842–4. [53]  Balemans W, Ebeling M, Patel N, Van Hul E, Olson P, Dioszegi M, et al. Increased bone density in sclerosteosis is due to the deficiency of a novel secreted protein (SOST). Hum Mol Genet 2001;10(5):537–43. [54]  van Bezooijen RL, Roelen BA, Visser A, van der Wee-Pals L, de Wilt E, Karperien M, et al. Sclerostin is an osteocyte-expressed negative regulator of bone formation, but not a classical BMP antagonist. J Exp Med 2004;199(6):805–14. [55]  Li X, Zhang Y, Kang H, Liu W, Liu P, Zhang J, et al. Sclerostin binds to LRP5/6 and antagonizes canonical Wnt signaling. J Biol Chem 2005;280(20):19883–7. [56]  Bellido T, Ali AA, Gubrij I, Plotkin LI, Fu Q, O’Brien CA, et al. Chronic elevation of parathyroid hormone in mice reduces expression of sclerostin by osteocytes: a novel mechanism for hormonal control of osteoblastogenesis. Endocrinology 2005;146(11):4577–83. [57]  Robling AG, Niziolek PJ, Baldridge LA, Condon KW, ­Allen MR, Alam I, et al. Mechanical stimulation of bone in vivo reduces osteocyte expression of Sost/sclerostin. J Biol Chem ­ 2008;283(9):5866–75. [58]  Tu X, Rhee Y, Condon K, Bivi N, Allen MR, Dwyer D, et al. Sost downregulation and local Wnt signaling are required for the osteogenic response to mechanical loading. Bone 2012;50(1): ­ 209–17. [59]  Atkins GJ, Rowe PS, Lim HP, Welldon KJ, Ormsby R, ­Wijenayaka AR, et al. Sclerostin is a locally acting regulator of late-­osteoblast/preosteocyte differentiation and regulates mineralization through a MEPE-ASARM-dependent mechanism. J Bone Miner Res 2011;26(7):1425–36. [60]  Tian X, Jee WS, Li X, Paszty C, Ke HZ. Sclerostin antibody ­increases bone mass by stimulating bone formation and inhibiting bone resorption in a hindlimb-immobilization rat model. Bone 2011;48(2):197–201. [61]  Padhi D, Jang G, Stouch B, Fang L, Posvar E. Single-dose, ­placebo-controlled, randomized study of AMG 785, a sclerostin monoclonal antibody. J Bone Miner Res 2011;26(1):19–26. [62]  Ominsky MS, Li C, Li X, Tan HL, Lee E, Barrero M, et al. Inhibition of sclerostin by monoclonal antibody enhances bone healing and improves bone density and strength of nonfractured bones. J Bone Miner Res 2011;26(5):1012–21. [63]  Fristad I, Vandevska-Radunovic V, Fjeld K, Wimalawansa SJ, Hals Kvinnsland I. NK1, NK2, NK3 and CGRP1 receptors identified in rat oral soft tissues, and in bone and dental hard tissue cells. Cell Tissue Res 2003;311(3):383–91. [64]  Igwe JC, Jiang X, Paic F, Ma L, Adams DJ, Baldock PA, et al. Neuropeptide Y is expressed by osteocytes and can inhibit osteoblastic activity. J Cell Biochem 2009;108(3):621–30.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

228

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

[65]  Turner CH, Robling AG, Duncan RL, Burr DB. Do bone cells ­behave like a neuronal network? Calcif Tissue Int 2002;70(6): 435–42. [66]  Gu G, Nars M, Hentunen TA, Metsikko K, Vaananen HK. Isolated primary osteocytes express functional gap junctions ­ in vitro. Cell Tissue Res 2006;323(2):263–71. [67]  Tanaka-Kamioka K, Kamioka H, Ris H, Lim SS. Osteocyte shape is dependent on actin filaments and osteocyte processes are unique actin-rich projections. J Bone Miner Res 1998;13(10): 1555–68. [68]  Kamioka H, Sugawara Y, Honjo T, Yamashiro T, Takano-­ Yamamoto T. Terminal differentiation of osteoblasts to osteocytes is accompanied by dramatic changes in the distribution of actin-binding proteins. J Bone Miner Res 2004;19(3):471–8. [69]  Nose K, Saito H, Kuroki T. Isolation of a gene sequence induced later by tumor-promoting 12–O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13– acetate in mouse osteoblastic cells (MC3T3–E1) and expressed constitutively in ras-transformed cells. Cell Growth Differ 1990;1(11):511–8. [70]  Ramirez MI, Millien G, Hinds A, Cao Y, Seldin DC, Williams MC. T1alpha, a lung type I cell differentiation gene, is required for normal lung cell proliferation and alveolus formation at birth. Dev Biol 2003;256(1):61–72. [71]  Paic F, Igwe JC, Nori R, Kronenberg MS, Franceschetti T, ­Harrington P, et al. Identification of differentially expressed genes between osteoblasts and osteocytes. Bone 2009;45(4): 682–92. [72]  Holmbeck K, Bianco P, Pidoux I, Inoue S, Billinghurst RC, Wu W, et al. The metalloproteinase MT1–MMP is required for normal development and maintenance of osteocyte processes in bone. J Cell Sci 2005;118(Pt 1):147–56. [73]  Zhao W, Byrne MH, Wang Y, Krane SM. Osteocyte and osteoblast apoptosis and excessive bone deposition accompany failure of collagenase cleavage of collagen. J Clin Invest 2000;106(8):941–9. [74]  Holmbeck K, Bianco P, Caterina J, Yamada S, Kromer M, Kuznetsov SA, et al. MT1–MMP-deficient mice develop dwarfism, osteopenia, arthritis, and connective tissue disease due to inadequate collagen turnover. Cell 1999;99(1):81–92. [75]  Okada S, Yoshida S, Ashrafi SH, Schraufnagel DE. The canalicular structure of compact bone in the rat at different ages. Microsc Microanal 2002;8(2):104–15. [76]  Veno PA, Nicolella DP, Kalajzic I, Rowe DW, Bonewald LF, ­Dallas SL. Dynamic imaging in living calvaria reveals the motile properties of osteoblasts and osteocytes and suggests ­ heterogeneity of osteoblasts in bone. J Bone Miner Res 2007;22 (Suppl. 1):S13. [77]  Dallas SL, Veno PA, Rosser JL, Barragan-Adjemian C, Rowe DW, Kalajzic I, et al. Time lapse imaging techniques for comparison of mineralization dynamics in primary murine osteoblasts and the late osteoblast/early osteocyte-like cell line MLO-A5. Cells Tissues Organs 2009;189(1–4):6–11. [78]  van der Plas A, Nijweide PJ. Isolation and purification of osteocytes. J Bone Miner Res 1992;7(4):389–96. [79]  Stern AR, Stern MM, VanDyke ME, Jahn K, Prideaux M, ­Bonewald LF. Isolation and culture of primary osteocytes from the long bones of skeletally mature and aged mice. Biotechniques 2012;52(6):361–73. [80]  Bodine PV, Vernon SK, Komm BS. Establishment and hormonal regulation of a conditionally transformed preosteocytic cell line from adult human bone. Endocrinology 1996;137(11):4592–604. [81]  Kato Y, Windle JJ, Koop BA, Mundy GR, Bonewald LF. Establishment of an osteocyte-like cell line, MLO-Y4. J Bone Miner Res 1997;12(12):2014–23. [82]  Sittichockechaiwut A, Scutt AM, Ryan AJ, Bonewald LF, Reilly GC. Use of rapidly mineralising osteoblasts and short periods of mechanical loading to accelerate matrix maturation in 3D scaffolds. Bone 2009;44(5):822–9.

[83]  Zahm AM, Bucaro MA, Srinivas V, Shapiro IM, Adams CS. ­Oxygen tension regulates preosteocyte maturation and mineralization. Bone 2008;43(1):25–31. [84]  Zahm AM, Bohensky J, Adams CS, Shapiro IM, Srinivas V. Bone cell autophagy is regulated by environmental factors. Cells ­Tissues Organs 2011;194(2–4):274–8. [85]  Woo SM, Rosser J, Dusevich V, Kalajzic I, Bonewald LF. Cell line IDG-SW3 replicates osteoblast-to-late-osteocyte differentiation in vitro and accelerates bone formation in vivo. J Bone Miner Res 2011;26(11):2634–46. [86]  Burr DB, Robling AG, Turner CH. Effects of biomechanical stress on bones in animals. Bone 2002;30(5):781–6. [87]  Ehrlich PJ, Noble BS, Jessop HL, Stevens HY, Mosley JR, Lanyon LE. The effect of in vivo mechanical loading on estrogen receptor alpha expression in rat ulnar osteocytes. J Bone Miner Res 2002;17(9):1646–55. [88]  Tatsumi S, Ishii K, Amizuka N, Li M, Kobayashi T, Kohno K, et al. Targeted ablation of osteocytes induces osteoporosis with defective mechanotransduction. Cell Metab 2007;5(6):464–75. [89]  Skerry TM, Bitensky L, Chayen J, Lanyon LE. Early strain-related changes in enzyme activity in osteocytes following bone loading in vivo. J Bone Miner Res 1989;4(5):783–8. [90]  Dallas SL, Zaman G, Pead MJ, Lanyon LE. Early strain-related changes in cultured embryonic chick tibiotarsi parallel those associated with adaptive modeling in vivo. J Bone Miner Res 1993;8(3):251–9. [91]  Dodds RA, Ali N, Pead MJ, Lanyon LE. Early loading-related changes in the activity of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and alkaline phosphatase in osteocytes and periosteal osteoblasts in rat fibulae in vivo. J Bone Miner Res 1993;8(3):261–7. [92]  Raab-Cullen DM, Thiede MA, Petersen DN, Kimmel DB, Recker RR. Mechanical loading stimulates rapid changes in periosteal gene expression. Calcif Tissue Int 1994;55(6):473–8. [93]  Gluhak-Heinrich J, Ye L, Bonewald LF, Feng JQ, MacDougall M, Harris SE, et al. Mechanical loading stimulates dentin matrix protein 1 (DMP1) expression in osteocytes in vivo. J Bone Miner Res 2003;18(5):807–17. [94]  Yang W, Lu Y, Kalajzic I, Guo D, Harris MA, Gluhak-­Heinrich J, et al. Dentin matrix protein 1 gene cis-regulation: use in ­osteocytes to characterize local responses to mechanical loading in vitro and in vivo. J Biol Chem 2005;280(21):20680–90. [95]  Xiong J, Onal M, Jilka RL, Weinstein RS, Manolagas SC, O’Brien CA. Matrix-embedded cells control osteoclast formation. Nat Med 2011;17(10):1235–41. [96]  Lin C, Jiang X, Dai Z, Guo X, Weng T, Wang J, et al. Sclerostin mediates bone response to mechanical unloading through antagonizing Wnt/beta-catenin signaling. J Bone Miner Res 2009;24(10):1651–61. [97]  Javaheri B, Dallas M, Zhao H, Bonewald L, Johnson M. β-Catenin hapliinsufficiency in osteocyte abolishes the osteogenic effect of mechanical loading in vivo. J Bone Miner Res 2011(Suppl. S24); #1068. [98]  Rubin CT, Lanyon LE. Regulation of bone formation by applied dynamic loads. J Bone Joint Surg Am 1984;66(3):397–402. [99]  Rubin CT, Lanyon LE. Regulation of bone mass by mechanical strain magnitude. Calcif Tissue Int 1985;37(4):411–7. [100] Turner CH, Forwood MR, Otter MW. Mechanotransduction in bone: do bone cells act as sensors of fluid flow? FASEB J 1994;8(11):875–8. [101] Robling AG, Burr DB, Turner CH. Partitioning a daily mechanical stimulus into discrete loading bouts improves the osteogenic response to loading. J Bone Miner Res 2000;15(8):1596–602. [102] Robling AG, Hinant FM, Burr DB, Turner CH. Shorter, more ­frequent mechanical loading sessions enhance bone mass. Med Sci Sports Exerc 2002;34(2):196–202. [103] Hsieh YF, Turner CH. Effects of loading frequency on mechanic­ ally induced bone formation. J Bone Miner Res 2001;16(5):918–24.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Acknowledgment

[104] Hsieh YF, Robling AG, Ambrosius WT, Burr DB, Turner CH. ­Mechanical loading of diaphyseal bone in vivo: the strain threshold for an osteogenic response varies with location. J Bone Miner Res 2001;16(12):2291–7. [105] Cowin SC, Moss-Salentijn L, Moss ML. Candidates for the mechanosensory system in bone. J Biomech Eng 1991;113(2):191–7. [106] Aarden EM, Burger EH, Nijweide PJ. Function of osteocytes in bone. J Cell Biochem 1994;55(3):287–99. [107] Burger EH, Klein-Nulend J. Mechanotransduction in bone – role of the lacuno-canalicular network. Faseb J 1999;13(Suppl.): S101–12. [108] Piekarski K, Munro M. Transport mechanism operating ­between blood supply and osteocytes in long bones. Nature 1977;269(5623):80–2. [109] Weinbaum S, Cowin SC, Zeng Y. A model for the excitation of osteocytes by mechanical loading-induced bone fluid shear stresses. J Biomech 1994;27(3):339–60. [110] Wang L, Fritton SP, Weinbaum S, Cowin SC. On bone adaptation due to venous stasis. J Biomech 2003;36(10):1439–51. [111] Knothe Tate ML. “Whither flows the fluid in bone?” An osteocyte’s perspective. J Biomech 2003;36:1409–24. [112] Fritton SP, Weinbaum S. Fluid and solute transport in bone: flow-induced mechanotransduction. Annu Rev Fluid Mech 2009;41:347–74. [113] Ajubi NE, Klein-Nulend J, Nijweide PJ, Vrijheid-Lammers T, ­Alblas MJ, Burger EH. Pulsating fluid flow increases prostaglandin production by cultured chicken osteocytes – a cytoskeleton-dependent process. Biochem Biophys Res Com­ mun 1996;225(1):62–8. [114] Wang L, Cowin SC, Weinbaum S, Fritton SP. Modeling tracer transport in an osteon under cyclic loading. Ann Biomed Eng 2000;28(10):1200–9. [115] Wang L, Wang Y, Han Y, Henderson SC, Majeska RJ, ­Weinbaum S, et al. In situ measurement of solute transport in the bone lacunar-canalicular system. Proc Natl Acad Sci U. S. A. 2005;102(33):11911–6. [116] Beno T, Yoon YJ, Cowin SC, Fritton SP. Estimation of bone permeability using accurate microstructural measurements. J ­ Biomech 2006;39(13):2378–87. [117] Han Y, Cowin SC, Schaffler MB, Weinbaum S. Mechanotransduction and strain amplification in osteocyte cell processes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U. S. A. 2004;101(47):16689–94. [118] Wang Y, McNamara LM, Schaffler MB, Weinbaum S. A model for the role of integrins in flow induced mechanotransduction in osteocytes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U. S. A. 2007;104(40):15941–6. [119] Adachi T, Aonuma Y, Tanaka M, Hojo M, Takano-Yamamoto T, Kamioka H. Calcium response in single osteocytes to locally applied mechanical stimulus: differences in cell process and cell body. J Biomech 2009;42(12):1989–95. [120] Burra S, Nicolella DP, Francis WL, Freitas CJ, Mueschke NJ, Poole K, et al. Dendritic processes of osteocytes are mechanotransducers that induce the opening of hemichannels. Proc Natl Acad Sci U. S. A. 2010;107(31):13648–53. [121] Pavalko FM, Norvell SM, Burr DB, Turner CH, Duncan RL, Bidwell JP. A model for mechanotransduction in bone cells: the load-bearing mechanosomes. J Cell Biochem 2003;88(1): 104–12. [122] Nicolella DP, Bonewald LF, Moravits DE, Lankford J. Measurement of microstructural strain in cortical bone. Eur J Morphol 2005;42(1–2):23–9. [123] Burr DB, Milgrom C, Fyhrie D, Forwood M, Nyska M, Finestone A, et al. In vivo measurement of human tibial strains during vigorous activity. Bone 1996;18(5):405–10. [124] Price C, Zhou X, Li W, Wang L. Real-time measurement of solute transport within the lacunar-canalicular system of mechanically loaded bone: direct evidence for load-induced fluid flow. J Bone Miner Res 2011;26(2):277–85.

229

[125] Nicolella DP, Moravits DE, Gale AM, Bonewald LF, Lankford J. Osteocyte lacunae tissue strain in cortical bone. J Biomech 2006;39(9):1735–43. [126] Rath Bonivtch A, Bonewald LF, Nicolella DP. Tissue strain ­amplification at the osteocyte lacuna: a microstructural finite element analysis. J Biomech 2007;40(10):2199–206. [127] Gluhak-Heinrich J, Yang W, Bonewald L, Robling AG, ­Turner CH, Harris SE. Mechanically induced DMP1 and MEPE ­expression in osteocytes: correlation to mechanical strain, osteogenic ­response and gene expression threshold. J Bone Miner Res 2005;20 (Suppl. 1):S73. [128] Klein-Nulend J, van der Plas A, Semeins CM, Ajubi NE, Frangos JA, Nijweide PJ, et al. Sensitivity of osteocytes to biomechanical stress in vitro. FASEB J 1995;9(5):441–5. [129] Kamel MA, Picconi JL, Lara-Castillo N, Johnson ML. Activation of beta-catenin signaling in MLO-Y4 osteocytic cells ­versus 2T3 osteoblastic cells by fluid flow shear stress and PGE(2): implications for the study of mechanosensation in bone. Bone 2010;47(5):872–81. [130] Kalogeropoulos M, Varanasi SS, Olstad OK, Sanderson P, ­Gautvik VT, Reppe S, et al. Zic1 transcription factor in bone: neural developmental protein regulates mechanotransduction in osteocytes. FASEB J 2010;24(8):2893–903. [131] Lu XL, Huo B, Chiang V, Guo XE. Osteocytic network is more responsive in calcium signaling than osteoblastic network under fluid flow. J Bone Miner Res 2011. [132] Jacobs CR, Yellowley CE, Davis BR, Zhou Z, Cimbala JM, ­Donahue HJ. Differential effect of steady versus oscillating flow on bone cells. J Biomech 1998;31(11):969–76. [133] Whitfield JF. Primary cilium – is it an osteocyte’s strain-sensing flowmeter? J Cell Biochem 2003;89(2):233–7. [134] Xiao Z, Zhang S, Mahlios J, Zhou G, Magenheimer BS, Guo D, et al. Cilia-like structures and polycystin-1 in osteoblasts/osteocytes and associated abnormalities in skeletogenesis and Runx2 expression. J Biol Chem 2006;281(41):30884–95. [135] Malone AM, Anderson CT, Tummala P, Kwon RY, Johnston TR, Stearns T, et al. Primary cilia mediate mechanosensing in bone cells by a calcium-independent mechanism. Proc Natl Acad Sci U. S. A. 2007;104(33):13325–30. [136] Kwon RY, Temiyasathit S, Tummala P, Quah CC, Jacobs CR. Primary cilium-dependent mechanosensing is mediated by adenylyl cyclase 6 and cyclic AMP in bone cells. FASEB J 2010;24(8):2859–68. [137] Hoey DA, Kelly DJ, Jacobs CR. A role for the primary cilium in paracrine signaling between mechanically stimulated osteocytes and mesenchymal stem cells. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2011;412(1):182–7. [138] Xiao Z, Dallas M, Qiu N, Nicolella D, Cao L, Johnson M, et al. Conditional deletion of Pkd1 in osteocytes disrupts skeletal mechanosensing in mice. FASEB J 2011;25(7):2418–32. [139] Qiu N, Cao L, David V, Quarles LD, Xiao Z. Kif3a deficiency reverses the skeletal abnormalities in Pkd1 deficient mice by restoring the balance between osteogenesis and adipogenesis. PLoS One 2010;5(12):e15240. [140] McNamara L, Majeska RJ, Weinbaum S, Friedrich V, Schaffler MB. Primary cilia in bone: few in number and restricted in their location. Anat Rec 2012; In press. [141] Hynes RO. Integrins: bidirectional, allosteric signaling machines. Cell 2002;110(6):673–87. [142] Salter DM, Robb JE, Wright MO. Electrophysiological responses of human bone cells to mechanical stimulation: evidence for specific integrin function in mechanotransduction. J Bone Miner Res 1997;12(7):1133–41. [143] Katsumi A, Orr AW, Tzima E, Schwartz MA. Integrins in mechanotransduction. J Biol Chem 2004;279(13):12001–4. [144] Hughes DE, Salter DM, Dedhar S, Simpson R. Integrin expression in human bone. J Bone Miner Res 1993;8(5):527–33.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

230

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

[145] Giancotti FG. Complexity and specificity of integrin signalling. Nat Cell Biol 2000;2(1):E13–4. [146] Lampe PD, Nguyen BP, Gil S, Usui M, Olerud J, Takada Y, et al. Cellular interaction of integrin alpha3beta1 with laminin 5 promotes gap junctional communication. J Cell Biol 1998;143(6):1735–47. [147] Guo Y, Martinez-Williams C, Yellowley CE, Donahue HJ, ­Rannels DE. Connexin expression by alveolar epithelial cells is regulated by extracellular matrix. Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 2001;280(2):L191–202. [148] Batra N, Siller-Jackson AJ, Gu S, Xia X, Weber GF, DeSimone, et al. Mechanical stress-activated integrin a5b1 induces opening of connexin 43 hemichannels. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2012:109:3359–64. [149] Batra N, Burra S, Siller-Jackson AJ, Gu S, Xia X, Weber GF, et al. Mechanical stress-activated integrin alpha5beta1 induces opening of connexin 43 hemichannels. Proc Natl Acad Sci U. S. A. 2012;109(9):3359–64. [150] Naruse K, Miyauchi A, Itoman M, Mikuni-Takagaki Y. Distinct anabolic response of osteoblast to low-intensity pulsed ultrasound. J Bone Miner Res 2003;18(2):360–9. [151] Lohmann CH, Schwartz Z, Liu Y, Li Z, Simon BJ, Sylvia VL, et al. Pulsed electromagnetic fields affect phenotype and connexin 43 protein expression in MLO-Y4 osteocyte-like cells and ROS 17/2.8 osteoblast-like cells. J Orthop Res 2003;21(2): 326–34. [152] Tan SD, Bakker AD, Semeins CM, Kuijpers-Jagtman AM, Klein-Nulend J. Inhibition of osteocyte apoptosis by fluid flow is mediated by nitric oxide. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2008;369(4):1150–4. [153] Bakker AD, Silva VC, Krishnan R, Bacabac RG, Blaauboer ME, Lin YC, et al. Tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin-1beta modulate calcium and nitric oxide signaling in mechanically stimulated osteocytes. Arthritis Rheum 2009;60(11):3336–45. [154] Bakker AD, Soejima K, Klein-Nulend J, Burger EH. The production of nitric oxide and prostaglandin E(2) by primary bone cells is shear stress dependent. J Biomech 2001;34(5):671–7. [155] Loveridge N, Fletcher S, Power J, Caballero-Alias AM, Das-­ Gupta V, Rushton N, et al. Patterns of osteocytic endothelial ­nitric oxide synthase expression in the femoral neck cortex: differences between cases of intracapsular hip fracture and controls. Bone 2002;30(6):866–71. [156] Watanuki M, Sakai A, Sakata T, Tsurukami H, Miwa M, Uchida Y, et al. Role of inducible nitric oxide synthase in skeletal adaptation to acute increases in mechanical loading. J Bone Miner Res 2002;17(6):1015–25. [157] Genetos DC, Geist DJ, Liu D, Donahue HJ, Duncan RL. Fluid shear-induced ATP secretion mediates prostaglandin release in MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts. J Bone Miner Res 2005;20(1):41–9. [158] Li J, Liu D, Ke HZ, Duncan RL, Turner CH. The P2X7 nucleotide receptor mediates skeletal mechanotransduction. J Biol Chem 2005;280(52):42952–9. [159] Labasi JM, Petrushova N, Donovan C, McCurdy S, Lira P, ­Payette MM, et al. Absence of the P2X7 receptor alters leukocyte function and attenuates an inflammatory response. J Immunol 2002;168(12):6436–45. [160] Raisz LG, Kream BE. Regulation of bone formation (second of two parts). N. Engl. J Med 1983;309(2):83–9. [161] Jee WS, Ueno K, Deng YP, Woodbury DM. The effects of prostaglandin E2 in growing rats: increased metaphyseal hard ­tissue and cortico-endosteal bone formation. Calcif Tissue Int 1985;37(2):148–57. [162] Raisz LG, Fall PM, Gabbitas BY, McCarthy TL, Kream BE, ­Canalis E. Effects of prostaglandin E2 on bone formation in cultured fetal rat calvariae: role of insulin-like growth factor-I. Endocrinology 1993;133(4):1504–10.

[163] Nagata T, Kaho K, Nishikawa S, Shinohara H, Wakano Y, Ishida H. Effect of prostaglandin E2 on mineralization of bone nodules formed by fetal rat calvarial cells. Calcif Tissue Int 1994;55(6): 451–7. [164] Klein-Nulend J, Burger EH, Semeins CM, Raisz LG, Pilbeam CC. Pulsating fluid flow stimulates prostaglandin release and inducible prostaglandin G/H synthase mRNA expression in primary mouse bone cells. J Bone Miner Res 1997;12(1):45–51. [165] Ajubi NE, Klein-Nulend J, Alblas MJ, Burger EH, Nijweide PJ. Signal transduction pathways involved in fluid flow-induced PGE2 production by cultured osteocytes. Am J Physiol 1999;276(1 Pt 1):E171–8. [166] Forwood MR. Inducible cyclo-oxygenase (COX-2) mediates the induction of bone formation by mechanical loading in vivo. J Bone Miner Res 1996;11(11):1688–93. [167] Hagino H, Kuraoka M, Kameyama Y, Okano T, Teshima R. Effect of a selective agonist for prostaglandin E receptor subtype EP4 (ONO-4819) on the cortical bone response to mechanical loading. Bone 2005;36(3):444–53. [168] Alam I, Warden SJ, Robling AG, Turner CH. Mechanotransduction in bone does not require a functional cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) gene. J Bone Miner Res 2005;20(3):438–46. [169] Johnson ML, Picconi JL, Recker RR. The gene for high bone mass. Endocrinologist 2002;12:445–53. [170] Little RD, Carulli JP, Del Mastro RG, Dupuis J, Osborne M, Folz C, et al. A mutation in the LDL receptor-related protein 5 gene results in the autosomal dominant high-bone-mass trait. Am J Hum Genet 2002;70(1):11–9. [171] Akhter MP, Wells DJ, Short SJ, Cullen DM, Johnson ML, Haynatzki GR, et al. Bone biomechanical properties in LRP5 ­mutant mice. Bone 2004;35(1):162–9. [172] Sawakami K, Robling AG, Ai M, Pitner ND, Liu D, Warden SJ, et al. The Wnt co-receptor LRP5 is essential for skeletal mechanotransduction but not for the anabolic bone response to parathyroid hormone treatment. J Biol Chem 2006;281:23698–711. [173] Chan BY, Fuller ES, Russell AK, Smith SM, Smith MM, Jackson MT, et al. Increased chondrocyte sclerostin may protect against cartilage degradation in osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis Cartilage 2011;19(7):874–85. [174] Kramer I, Halleux C, Keller H, Pegurri M, Gooi JH, Weber PB, et al. Osteocyte Wnt/beta-catenin signaling is required for normal bone homeostasis. Mol Cell Biol 2010;30(12):3071–85. [175] Bonewald LF, Johnson ML. Osteocytes, mechanosensing and Wnt signaling. Bone 2008;42(4):606–15. [176] Kitase Y, Barragan L, Jiang JX, Johnson ML, Bonewald LF. ­Mechanical induction of PGE(2) in osteocytes blocks glucocorticoid induced apoptosis through both the beta-catenin and PKA pathways. J Bone Miner Res 2010;25(12):2657–68. [177] Xia X, Batra N, Shi Q, Bonewald LF, Sprague E, Jiang JX. Prostaglandin promotion of osteocyte gap junction function through transcriptional regulation of connexin 43 by glycogen synthase kinase 3/beta-catenin signaling. Mol Cell Biol 2010;30(1):206–19. [178] Zaman G, Jessop HL, Muzylak M, De Souza RL, Pitsillides AA, Price JS, et al. Osteocytes use estrogen receptor alpha to respond to strain but their ERalpha content is regulated by estrogen. J Bone Miner Res 2006;21(8):1297–306. [179] Lee KC, Lanyon LE. Mechanical loading influences bone mass through estrogen receptor alpha. Exerc Sport Sci Rev 2004;32(2):64–8. [180] Lee KC, Jessop H, Suswillo R, Zaman G, Lanyon LE. The adaptive response of bone to mechanical loading in female transgenic mice is deficient in the absence of oestrogen receptor-alpha and -beta. J Endocrinol 2004;182(2):193–201. [181] Heino TJ, Hentunen TA, Vaananen HK. Osteocytes inhibit osteoclastic bone resorption through transforming growth factor-beta: enhancement by estrogen. J Cell Biochem 2002;85(1):185–97.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Acknowledgment

[182] Heino TJ, Hentunen TA, Vaananen HK. Conditioned medium from osteocytes stimulates the proliferation of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells and their differentiation into osteoblasts. Exp Cell Res 2004;294(2):458–68. [183] Power J, Loveridge N, Rushton N, Parker M, Reeve J. Osteocyte density in aging subjects is enhanced in bone adjacent to remodeling haversian systems. Bone 2002;30(6):859–65. [184] Tanaka K, Yamaguchi Y, Hakeda Y. Isolated chick osteocytes stimulate formation and bone-resorbing activity of osteoclastlike cells. J Bone Miner Metab 1995;13:61–70. [185] Zhao S, Zhang YK, Harris S, Ahuja SS, Bonewald LF. MLO-Y4 osteocyte-like cells support osteoclast formation and activation. J Bone Miner Res 2002;17(11):2068–79. [186] Kartsogiannis V, Zhou H, Horwood NJ, Thomas RJ, Hards DK, Quinn JM, et al. Localization of RANKL (receptor activator of NF kappa B ligand) mRNA and protein in skeletal and extraskeletal tissues. Bone 1999;25(5):525–34. [187] Silvestrini G, Ballanti P, Patacchioli F, Leopizzi M, Gualtieri N, Monnazzi P, et al. Detection of osteoprotegerin (OPG) and its ligand (RANKL) mRNA and protein in femur and tibia of the rat. J Mol Histol 2005;36(1–2):59–67. [188] Kurata K, Heino TJ, Higaki H, Vaananen HK. Bone marrow cell differentiation induced by mechanically damaged osteocytes in 3D gel-embedded culture. J Bone Miner Res 2006;21(4): 616–25. [189] Kulkarni RN, Bakker AD, Everts V, Klein-Nulend J. Inhibition of osteoclastogenesis by mechanically loaded osteocytes: involvement of MEPE. Calcif Tissue Int 2010;87(5):461–8. [190] Nakashima T, Hayashi M, Fukunaga T, Kurata K, Oh-Hora M, Feng JQ, et al. Evidence for osteocyte regulation of bone ­homeostasis through RANKL expression. Nat Med 2011;17(10): 1231–4. [191] Ikeda T, Utsuyama M, Hirokawa K. Expression profiles of receptor activator of nuclear factor kappaB ligand, receptor ­ ­activator of nuclear factor kappaB, and osteoprotegerin messenger RNA in aged and ovariectomized rat bones. J Bone Miner Res 2001;16(8):1416–25. [192] Verborgt O, Tatton NA, Majeska RJ, Schaffler MB. Spatial distribution of Bax and Bcl-2 in osteocytes after bone fatigue: complementary roles in bone remodeling regulation? J Bone Miner Res 2002;17(5):907–14. [193] Manolagas SC. Choreography from the tomb: an emerging role of dying osteocytes in the purposeful, and perhpas not so purposeful, targeting of bone remodeling. BoneKEy 2006;3:5–14. [194] Dunstan CR, Evans RA, Hills E, Wong SY, Higgs RJ. Bone death in hip fracture in the elderly. Calcif Tissue Int 1990;47(5):270–5. [195] Weinstein RS, Nicholas RW, Manolagas SC. Apoptosis of osteocytes in glucocorticoid-induced osteonecrosis of the hip. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2000;85(8):2907–12. [196] Wong SY, Evans RA, Needs C, Dunstan CR, Hills E, Garvan J. The pathogenesis of osteoarthritis of the hip. Evidence for primary osteocyte death. Clin Orthop Relat Res 1987;214:305–12. [197] Noble BS, Peet N, Stevens HY, Brabbs A, Mosley JR, Reilly GC, et al. Mechanical loading: biphasic osteocyte survival and targeting of osteoclasts for bone destruction in rat cortical bone. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 2003;284(4):C934–43. [198] Verborgt O, Gibson GJ, Schaffler MB. Loss of osteocyte integrity in association with microdamage and bone remodeling after ­fatigue in vivo. J Bone Miner Res 2000;15(1):60–7. [199] Gross TS, Akeno N, Clemens TL, Komarova S, Srinivasan S, Weimer DA, et al. Selected contribution: osteocytes upregulate HIF-1alpha in response to acute disuse and oxygen deprivation. J Appl Physiol 2001;90(6):2514–9. [200] Gross TS, King KA, Rabaia NA, Pathare P, Srinivasan S. Upregulation of osteopontin by osteocytes deprived of mechanical loading or oxygen. J Bone Miner Res 2005;20(2):250–6.

231

[201] Tomkinson A, Reeve J, Shaw RW, Noble BS. The death of osteocytes via apoptosis accompanies estrogen withdrawal in human bone. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1997;82(9):3128–35. [202] Pacifici R, Brown C, Puscheck E, Friedrich E, Slatopolsky E, ­Maggio D, et al. Effect of surgical menopause and estrogen ­replacement on cytokine release from human blood mononuclear­ cells. Proc Natl Acad Sci U. S. A. 1991;88(12):5134–8. [203] Rickard D, Russell G, Gowen M. Oestradiol inhibits the release of tumour necrosis factor but not interleukin 6 from adult human osteoblasts in vitro. Osteoporos Int 1992;2(2):94–102. [204] Kousteni S, Bellido T, Plotkin LI, O’Brien CA, Bodenner DL, Han L, et al. Nongenotropic, sex-nonspecific signaling through the ­estrogen or androgen receptors: dissociation from transcriptional activity. Cell 2001;104(5):719–30. [205] Plotkin LI, Weinstein RS, Parfitt AM, Roberson PK, Manolagas SC, Bellido T. Prevention of osteocyte and osteoblast apoptosis by bisphosphonates and calcitonin. J Clin Invest 1999;104(10): 1363–74. [206] Ahuja SS, Zhao S, Bellido T, Plotkin LI, Jimenez F, Bonewald LF. CD40 ligand blocks apoptosis induced by tumor necrosis factor alpha, glucocorticoids, and etoposide in osteoblasts and the ­osteocyte-like cell line murine long bone osteocyte-Y4. Endocrinology 2003;144(5):1761–9. [207] Liu Y, Porta A, Peng X, Gengaro K, Cunningham EB, Li H, et al. Prevention of glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis in o ­steocytes and osteoblasts by calbindin-D28k. J Bone Miner Res 2004;19(3): 479–90. [208] Plotkin LI, Bellido T. Bisphosphonate-induced, hemichannelmediated, anti-apoptosis through the Src/ERK pathway: a gap junction-independent action of connexin43. Cell Commun ­Adhes 2001;8(4–6):377–82. [209] Kogianni G, Mann V, Ebetino F, Nuttall M, Nijweide P, ­Simpson H, et al. Fas/CD95 is associated with glucocorticoid-induced ­osteocyte apoptosis. Life Sci 2004;75(24):2879–95. [210] Xia X, Kar R, Gluhak-Heinrich J, Yao W, Lane NE, Bonewald LF, et al. Glucocorticoid induced autophagy in osteocytes. J Bone Miner Res 2010;25(11):2479–88. [211] Jia J, Yao W, Guan M, Dai W, Shahnazari M, Kar R, et al. Glucocorticoid dose determines osteocyte cell fate. FASEB J 2011;25(10):3366–76. [212] Zhao H, Xiong X, Onal M, Cazer P, Weinstein R, Manolagas S, et al. Osteocyte autophagy declines with age in mice and suppression of autophagy decreases bone mass. J Bone Miner Res 2011(S13); #1039. [213] Recklinghausen FV. Untersuchungen uber Rachitis und Osteomalacia. Jena: Gustav Fischer; 1910. [214] Heller-Steinberg M. Ground substance, bone salts, and cellular activity in bone formation and destruction. Am J Anat 1951;89(3):347–79. [215] Belanger LF. Osteocytic osteolysis. Calcif Tissue Res 1969;4(1):1–2. [216] Kremlien B, Manegold C, Ritz E, Bommer J. The influence of immobilization on osteocyte morphology: osteocyte differential count and electron microscopic studies. Virchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histol 1976;370(1):55–68. [217] Bonucci E, Gherardi G. Osteocyte ultrastructure in renal osteodystrophy. Virchows Arch A Pathol Anat Histol 1977;373(3): 213–31. [218] Heuck F. Comparative investigations of the function of osteocytes in bone resorption. Calcif Tissue Res 1970(Suppl.):148–9. [219] Marie PJ, Glorieux FH. Relation between hypomineralized periosteocytic lesions and bone mineralization in vitamin D-resistant rickets. Calcif Tissue Int 1983;35(4–5):443–8. [220] Iagodovskii VS, Triftanidi LA, Gorokhova GP. Effect of space flight on rat skeletal bones (an optical light and electron microscopic study). Kosm Biol Aviakosm Med 1977;11(1):14–20; [In Russian].

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

232

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

[221] Haller AC, Zimny ML. Effects of hibernation on interradicular alveolar bone. J Dent Res 1977;56(12):1552–7. [222] Alcobendas M, Baud CA, Castanet J. Structural changes of the periosteocytic area in Vipera aspis (L.) (Ophidia, Viperidae) bone tissue in various physiological conditions. Calcif Tissue Int 1991;49(1):53–7. [223] Lane NE. An update on glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis. Rheum Dis Clin North Am 2001;27(1):235–53. [224] Saag KG. Glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis. Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am 2003;32(1):135–57. [225] Lane NE, Yao W, Balooch M, Nalla RK, Balooch G, Habelitz S, et al. Glucocorticoid-treated mice have localized changes in trabecular bone material properties and osteocyte lacunar size that are not observed in placebo-treated or estrogen-deficient mice. J Bone Miner Res 2006;21(3):466–76. [226] Baud CA, Dupont DH. Electron Microscopy. New York: Academic Press; 1962. [227] Baylink DJ, Wergedal JE. Bone formation by osteocytes. Am J Physiol 1971;221(3):669–78. [228] Wergedal JE, Baylink DJ. Distribution of acid and alkaline phosphatase activity in undemineralized sections of the rat tibial ­diaphysis. J Histochem Cytochem 1969;17(12):799–806. [229] Nakano Y, Toyosawa S, Takano Y. Eccentric localization of ­osteocytes expressing enzymatic activities, protein, and mRNA signals for type 5 tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP). J Histochem Cytochem 2004;52(11):1475–82. [230] Zambonin Zallone A, Teti A, Primavera MV, Pace G. Mature ­osteocytes behaviour in a repletion period: the occurrence of ­osteoplastic activity. Basic Appl Histochem 1983;27(3):191–204. [231] Qing H, Bonewald LF. Osteocyte remodeling of the perilacunar and pericanalicular matrix. Int J Oral Sci 2009;1(2):59–65. [232] Boyde A, Sela J. Scanning electron microscope study of separated calcospherites from the matrices of different mineralizing systems. Calcif Tissue Res 1978;26(1):47–9. [233] van der Plas A, Aarden EM, Feijen JH, de Boer AH, Wiltink A, Alblas MJ, et al. Characteristics and properties of osteocytes in culture. J Bone Miner Res 1994;9(11):1697–704. [234] Qing H, Ardeshirpour L, Pajevic PD, Dusevich V, Jahn K, Kato S, et al. Demonstration of osteocytic perilacunar/canalicular remodeling in mice during lactation. J Bone Miner Res 2012;27(5):1018–29. [235] Bonewald LF. Osteocytes as dynamic, multifunctional cells. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2007;1116:281–90. [236] Thompson DL, Sabbagh Y, Tenenhouse HS, Roche PC, Drezner MK, Salisbury JL, et al. Ontogeny of Phex/PHEX protein expression in mouse embryo and subcellular localization in osteoblasts. J Bone Miner Res 2002;17(2):311–20. [237] Nampei A, Hashimoto J, Hayashida K, Tsuboi H, Shi K, Tsuji I, et al. Matrix extracellular phosphoglycoprotein (MEPE) is highly expressed in osteocytes in human bone. J Bone Miner Metab 2004;22(3):176–84. [238] Yang W, Lu Y, Kalajzic I, Guo D, Harris MA, Gluhak-Heinrich J, et al. ­ Dentin Matrix Protein 1 gene cis-regulation: use in ­osteocytes to characterize local responses to mechanical loading in vitro and in vivo. J Biol Chem 2006;280:20680–90. [239] Rowe PS, Oudet CL, Francis F, Sinding C, Pannetier S, Econs MJ, et al. Distribution of mutations in the PEX gene in families with X-linked hypophosphataemic rickets (HYP). Hum Mol Genet 1997;6(4):539–49. [240] Liu S, Zhou J, Tang W, Jiang X, Rowe DW, Quarles LD. Pathogenic role of Fgf23 in Hyp mice. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 2006;291(1):E38–49. [241] Pereira RC, Juppner H, Azucena-Serrano CE, Yadin O, Salusky IB, Wesseling-Perry K. Patterns of FGF-23, DMP1, and MEPE expression in patients with chronic kidney disease. Bone 2009;45(6):1161–8.

[242] Martin A, Liu S, David V, Li H, Karydis A, Feng JQ, et al. Bone prot­eins PHEX and DMP1 regulate fibroblastic growth factor Fgf23 expression in osteocytes through a common pathway ­ involving FGF receptor (FGFR) signaling. FASEB J 2011;25(8):2551–62. [243] Addison WN, Nakano Y, Loisel T, Crine P, McKee MD. MEPEASARM peptides control extracellular matrix mineralization by binding to hydroxyapatite: an inhibition regulated by PHEX cleavage of ASARM. J Bone Miner Res 2008;23(10):1638–49. [244] Yamashita T, Yoshioka M, Itoh N. Identification of a novel ­fibroblast growth factor, FGF-23, preferentially expressed in the ­ventrolateral thalamic nucleus of the brain. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 2000;277(2):494–8. [245] Shimada T, Kakitani M, Yamazaki Y, Hasegawa H, Takeuchi Y, Fujita T, et al. Targeted ablation of Fgf23 demonstrates an ­essential physiological role of FGF23 in phosphate and vitamin D ­metabolism. J Clin Invest 2004;113(4):561–8. [246] Lavi-Moshayoff V, Wasserman G, Meir T, Silver J, Naveh-Many T. PTH increases FGF23 gene expression and mediates the highFGF23 levels of experimental kidney failure: a bone parathyroid feedback loop. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 2010;299(4):F882–9. [247] Rhee Y, Bivi N, Farrow E, Lezcano V, Plotkin LI, White KE, et al. Parathyroid hormone receptor signaling in osteocytes increases the expression of fibroblast growth factor-23 in vitro and in vivo. Bone 2011;49(4):636–43. [248] Huggett JF, Mustafa A, O’Neal L, Mason DJ. The glutamate transporter GLAST-1 (EAAT-1) is expressed in the plasma membrane of osteocytes and is responsive to extracellular glutamate concentration. Biochem Soc Trans 2002;30(Pt 6):890–3. [249] Westbroek I, van der Plas A, de Rooij KE, Klein-Nulend J, ­Nijweide PJ. Expression of serotonin receptors in bone. J Biol Chem 2001;276(31):28961–8. [250] Gustafsson BI, Westbroek I, Waarsing JH, Waldum H, Solligard E, Brunsvik A, et al. Long-term serotonin administration leads to higher bone mineral density, affects bone architecture, and leads to higher femoral bone stiffness in rats. J Cell Biochem 2006;97(6):1283–91. [251] Doty SB. Morphological evidence of gap junctions between bone cells. Calcif Tissue Int 1981;33(5):509–12. [252] Palumbo C, Palazzini S, Marotti G. Morphological study of intercellular junctions during osteocyte differentiation. Bone 1990;11(6):401–6. [253] Jeansonne BG, Feagin FF, McMinn RW, Shoemaker RL, Rehm WS. Cell-to-cell communication of osteoblasts. J Dent Res 1979;58(4):1415–23. [254] Lecanda F, Warlow PM, Sheikh S, Furlan F, Steinberg TH, ­Civitelli R. Connexin43 deficiency causes delayed ossification, craniofacial abnormalities, and osteoblast dysfunction. J Cell Biol 2000;151(4):931–44. [255] Donahue HJ, Li Z, Zhou Z, Yellowley CE. Differentiation of ­human fetal osteoblastic cells and gap junctional intercellular communication. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 2000;278(2):C315–22. [256] Saunders MM, You J, Trosko JE, Yamasaki H, Li Z, Donahue HJ, et al. Gap junctions and fluid flow response in MC3T3–E1 cells. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 2001;281(6):C1917–25. [257] Saunders MM, You J, Zhou Z, Li Z, Yellowley CE, Kunze EL, et al. Fluid flow-induced prostaglandin E2 response of osteoblastic ROS 17/2.8 cells is gap junction-mediated and independent of cytosolic calcium. Bone 2003;32(4):350–6. [258] Cheng B, Zhao S, Luo J, Sprague E, Bonewald LF, Jiang JX. Expression of functional gap junctions and regulation by fluid flow in osteocyte-like MLO-Y4 cells. J Bone Miner Res 2001;16(2):249–59. [259] Cheng B, Kato Y, Zhao S, Luo J, Sprague E, Bonewald LF, et al. PGE(2) is essential for gap junction-mediated intercellular communication between osteocyte-like MLO-Y4 cells in response to mechanical strain. Endocrinology 2001;142(8):3464–73.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

Acknowledgment

[260] Alford AI, Jacobs CR, Donahue HJ. Oscillating fluid flow regulates gap junction communication in osteocytic MLO-Y4 cells by an ERK1/2 MAP kinase-dependent mechanism small star, filled. Bone 2003;33(1):64–70. [261] Yellowley CE, Li Z, Zhou Z, Jacobs CR, Donahue HJ. Functional gap junctions between osteocytic and osteoblastic cells. J Bone Miner Res 2000;15(2):209–17. [262] Rawlinson SC, Pitsillides AA, Lanyon LE. Involvement of different ion channels in osteoblasts’ and osteocytes’ early responses to mechanical strain. Bone 1996;19(6):609–14. [263] Ypey DL, Weidema AF, Hold KM, Van der Laarse A, Ravesloot JH, Van Der Plas A, et al. Voltage, calcium, and stretch activated ionic channels and intracellular calcium in bone cells. J Bone Miner Res 1992;7(Suppl. 2):S377–87. [264] Goodenough DA, Paul DL. Beyond the gap: functions of unpaired connexon channels. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 2003;4(4): 285–94. [265] Plotkin LI, Manolagas SC, Bellido T. Transduction of cell survival signals by connexin-43 hemichannels. J Biol Chem 2002;277(10):8648–57. [266] Cherian PP, Siller-Jackson AJ, Gu S, Wang X, Bonewald LF, Sprague E, et al. Mechanical strain opens connexin 43 hemichannels in osteocytes: a novel mechanism for the release of prostaglandin. Mol Biol Cell 2005;16(7):3100–6. [267] Ye L, Mishina Y, Chen D, Huang H, Dallas SL, Dallas MR, et al. Dmp1–deficient mice display severe defects in cartilage formation responsible for a chondrodysplasia-like phenotype. J Biol Chem 2005;280(7):6197–203. [268] Sun N, Gao Y, Pretoriu J, Morony S, Kostenuik PJ, Simonet S, et al. High bone mineral density in SOST knock-out mice demonstractes functional conservation of osteocyte mediated bone ­homeostasis in mouse and human. J Bone Miner Res 2003;18(Suppl. 2):S7. [269] Zhang R, Lu Y, Ye L, Yuan B, Yu S, Qin C, et al. Unique roles of phosphorus in endochondral bone formation and osteocyte maturation. J Bone Miner Res 2011;26(5):1047–56. [270] Jordan GR, Loveridge N, Power J, Clarke MT, Parker M, Reeve J. The ratio of osteocytic incorporation to bone matrix formation in femoral neck cancellous bone: an enhanced osteoblast work rate in the vicinity of hip osteoarthritis. Calcif Tissue Int 2003;72(3):190–6. [271] Borton AJ, Frederick JP, Datto MB, Wang XF, Weinstein RS. The loss of Smad3 results in a lower rate of bone formation and ­osteopenia through dysregulation of osteoblast differentiation and apoptosis. J Bone Miner Res 2001;16(10):1754–64. [272] Vashishth D, Verborgt O, Divine G, Schaffler MB, Fyhrie DP. Decline in osteocyte lacunar density in human cortical bone is associated with accumulation of microcracks with age. Bone 2000;26(4):375–80. [273] Qiu S, Rao DS, Palnitkar S, Parfitt AM. Relationships between osteocyte density and bone formation rate in human cancellous bone. Bone 2002;31(6):709–11. [274] Qiu S, Rao DS, Palnitkar S, Parfitt AM. Age and distance from the surface but not menopause reduce osteocyte density in ­human cancellous bone. Bone 2002;31(2):313–8. [275] Qiu S, Rao DS, Palnitkar S, Parfitt AM. Reduced iliac cancellous osteocyte density in patients with osteoporotic vertebral fracture. J Bone Miner Res 2003;18(9):1657–63. [276] Qiu S, Rao DS, Palnitkar S, Parfitt AM. Differences in osteocyte and lacunar density between Black and White American women. Bone 2006;38(1):130–5. [277] Robling AG, Turner CH. Mechanotransduction in bone: genetic effects on mechanosensitivity in mice. Bone 2002;31(5):562–9. [278] Palumbo C, Ferretti M, Marotti G. Osteocyte dendrogenesis in static and dynamic bone formation: an ultrastructural study. Anat Rec A Discov Mol Cell Evol Biol 2004;278(1):474–80.

233

[279] Knothe Tate ML, Adamson JR, Tami AE, Bauer TW. The osteocyte. Int J Biochem Cell Biol 2004;36(1):1–8. [280] Cruess RL, Ross D, Crawshaw E. The etiology of steroid-induced avascular necrosis of bone. A laboratory and clinical study Clin Orthop Relat Res 1975;113:178–83. [281] Kenzora JE, Glimcher MJ. Accumulative cell stress: the multifactorial etiology of idiopathic osteonecrosis. Orthop Clin North Am 1985;16(4):669–79. [282] Lavernia CJ, Sierra RJ, Grieco FR. Osteonecrosis of the femoral head. J Am Acad Orthop Surg 1999;7(4):250–61. [283] Weinstein RS, Jilka RL, Parfitt AM, Manolagas SC. Inhibition of osteoblastogenesis and promotion of apoptosis of osteoblasts and osteocytes by glucocorticoids. Potential mechanisms of their deleterious effects on bone. J Clin Invest 1998;102(2): 274–82. [284] Zalavras C, Shah S, Birnbaum MJ, Frenkel B. Role of apoptosis in glucocorticoid-induced osteoporosis and osteonecrosis. Crit Rev Eukaryot Gene Expr 2003;13(2–4):221–35. [285] Calder JD, Buttery L, Revell PA, Pearse M, Polak JM. Apoptosis – a significant cause of bone cell death in osteonecrosis of the femoral head. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2004;86(8):1209–13. [286] Perrotta I, Cristofaro MG, Amantea M, Russo E, De Fazio S, Zuccala V, et al. Jaw osteonecrosis in patients treated with bisphosphonates: an ultrastructural study. Ultrastruct Pathol 2010;34(4):207–13. [287] Oostlander AE, Bravenboer N, Sohl E, Holzmann PJ, Van der Woude CJ, Dijkstra G, et al. Histomorphometric analysis reveals reduced bone mass and bone formation in patients with quiescent Crohn’s disease. Gastroenterology 2011;140(1):116–23. [288] Consortium ADHR. Autosomal dominant hypophosphataemic rickets is associated with mutations in FGF23. Nat Genet 2000;26(3):345–8. [289] Larsson T, Marsell R, Schipani E, Ohlsson C, Ljunggren O, ­Tenenhouse HS, et al. Transgenic mice expressing fibroblast growth factor 23 under the control of the alpha1(I) collagen promoter exhibit growth retardation, osteomalacia, and disturbed phosphate homeostasis. Endocrinology 2004;145(7):3087–94. [290] Aono Y, Yamazaki Y, Yasutake J, Kawata T, Hasegawa H, Urakawa I, et al. Therapeutic effects of anti-FGF23 antibodies in hypophosphatemic rickets/osteomalacia. J Bone Miner Res 2009;24(11):1879–88. [291] Larsson T, Nisbeth U, Ljunggren O, Juppner H, Jonsson KB. Circulating concentration of FGF-23 increases as renal function declines in patients with chronic kidney disease, but does not change in response to variation in phosphate intake in healthy volunteers. Kidney Int 2003;64(6):2272–9. [292] Mirza MA, Hansen T, Johansson L, Ahlstrom H, Larsson A, Lind L, et al. Relationship between circulating FGF23 and total body atherosclerosis in the community. Nephrol Dial Transplant 2009;24(10):3125–31. [293] Mirza MA, Larsson A, Melhus H, Lind L, Larsson TE. Serum intact FGF23 associate with left ventricular mass, hypertrophy and geometry in an elderly population. Atherosclerosis 2009;207(2):546–51. [294] Hsu HJ, Wu MS. Fibroblast growth factor 23: a possible cause of left ventricular hypertrophy in hemodialysis patients. Am J Med Sci 2009;337(2):116–22. [295] Dalal M, Sun K, Cappola AR, Ferrucci L, Crasto C, Fried LP, et al. Relationship of serum fibroblast growth factor 23 with cardiovascular disease in older community-dwelling women. Eur J ­Endocrinol 2011;165(5):797–803. [296] Desjardins L, Liabeuf S, Renard C, Lenglet A, Lemke HD, Choukroun GEuropean Uremic Toxin (EUTox) Work Group, et al. FGF23 is independently associated with vascular calcification but not bone mineral density in patients at various CKD stages. Osteoporos Int 2012;23(7):2017–25.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE

234

10.  OSTEOCYTE BIOLOGY

[297] Padagas J, Colloton M, Shalhoub V, Kostenuik P, Morony S, ­Munyakazi L, et al. The receptor activator of nuclear factor-­ kappaB ligand inhibitor osteoprotegerin is a bone-protective agent in a rat model of chronic renal insufficiency and hyperparathyroidism. Calcif Tissue Int 2006;78(1):35–44. [298] Ominsky MS, Vlasseros F, Jolette J, Smith SY, Stouch B, Doellgast G, et al. Two doses of sclerostin antibody in cynomolgus monkeys increases bone formation, bone mineral density, and bone strength. J Bone Miner Res 2010;25(5):948–59. [299] Marenzana M, Greenslade K, Eddleston A, Okoye R, Marshall D, Moore A, et al. Sclerostin antibody treatment enhances bone strength but does not prevent growth retardation in young mice treated with dexamethasone. Arthritis Rheum 2011;63(8): 2385–95. [300] Terpos E, Christoulas D, Katodritou E, Bratengeier C, Gkotzamanidou M, Michalis E, et al. Elevated circulating sclerostin correlates with advanced disease features and abnormal bone ­remodeling in symptomatic myeloma: reduction post-­ bortezomib monotherapy. Int J Cancer 2011;131(6):1466–71.

[301] Heath DJ, Chantry AD, Buckle CH, Coulton L, Shaughnessy Jr JD, Evans HR, et al. Inhibiting Dickkopf-1 (Dkk1) removes suppression of bone formation and prevents the development of osteolytic bone disease in multiple myeloma. J Bone Miner Res 2009;24(3):425–36. [302] Qiang YW, Chen Y, Brown N, Hu B, Epstein J, Barlogie B, et al. Characterization of Wnt/beta-catenin signalling in osteoclasts in multiple myeloma. Br J Haematol 2010;148(5):726–38. [303] Cowin SC, Weinbaum S, Zeng Y. A case for bone canaliculi as the anatomical site of strain generated potentials. J Biomech 1995;28(11):1281–97. [304] Wang L, Ciani C, Doty SB, Fritton SP. Delineating bone’s interstitial fluid pathway in vivo. Bone 2004;34(3):499–509. [305] Dodd JS, Raleigh JA, Gross TS. Osteocyte hypoxia: a novel mechanotransduction pathway. Am J Physiol 1999;277(3 Pt 1):C598–602. [306] Reilly GC, Haut TR, Yellowley CE, Donahue HJ, Jacobs CR. Fluid flow induced PGE2 release by bone cells is reduced by glycocalyx degradation whereas calcium signals are not. Biorheology 2003;40(6):591–603.

II.  CELLULAR, MOLECULAR, AND DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF BONE