Medicine (St Vincent's) - Research Publications

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    Osteoclast Inhibitory Lectin, an Immune Cell Product That Is Required for Normal Bone Physiology in Vivo
    Kartsogiannis, V ; Sims, NA ; Quinn, JMW ; Ly, C ; Cipetic, M ; Poulton, IJ ; Walker, EC ; Saleh, H ; McGregor, NE ; Wallace, ME ; Smyth, MJ ; Martin, TJ ; Zhou, H ; Ng, KW ; Gillespie, MT (AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC, 2008-11-07)
    Osteoclast inhibitory lectin (OCIL or clrb) is a member of the natural killer cell C-type lectins that have a described role mostly in autoimmune cell function. OCIL was originally identified as an osteoblast-derived inhibitor of osteoclast formation in vitro. To determine the physiological function(s) of OCIL, we generated ocil(-/-) mice. These mice appeared healthy and were fertile, with no apparent immune function defect, and phenotypic abnormalities were limited to bone. Histomorphometric analysis revealed a significantly lower tibial trabecular bone volume and trabecular number in the 10- and 16-week-old male ocil(-/-) mice compared with wild type mice. Furthermore, ocil(-/-) mice showed reduced bone formation rate in the 10-week-old females and 16-week-old males while Static markers of bone formation showed no significant changes in male or female ocil(-/-) mice. Examination of bone resorption markers in the long bones of ocil(-/-) mice indicated a transient increase in osteoclast number per unit bone perimeter. Enhanced osteoclast formation was also observed when either bone marrow or splenic cultures were generated in vitro from ocil(-/-) mice relative to wild type control cultures. Loss of ocil therefore resulted in osteopenia in adult mice primarily as a result of increased osteoclast formation and/or decreased bone formation. The enhanced osteoclastic activity led to elevated serum calcium levels, which resulted in the suppression of circulating parathyroid hormone in 10-week-old ocil(-/-) mice compared with wild type control mice. Collectively, our data suggest that OCIL is a physiological negative regulator of bone.
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    Autocrine and Paracrine Regulation of the Murine Skeleton by Osteocyte-Derived Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein
    Ansari, N ; Ho, PWM ; Crimeen-Irwin, B ; Poulton, IJ ; Brunt, AR ; Forwood, MR ; Pajevic, PD ; Gooi, JH ; Martin, TJ ; Sims, NA (WILEY, 2018-01)
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    Retinoic Acid Receptor γ Activity in Mesenchymal Stem Cells Regulates Endochondral Bone, Angiogenesis, and B Lymphopoiesis
    Green, AC ; Rudolph-Stringer, V ; Straszkowski, L ; Tjin, G ; Crimeen-Irwin, B ; Walia, M ; Martin, TJ ; Sims, NA ; Purton, LE (WILEY, 2018-12)
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    Increased autophagy in EphrinB2-deficient osteocytes is associated with elevated secondary mineralization and brittle bone (vol 10, 3436, 2019)
    Vrahnas, C ; Blank, M ; Dite, TA ; Tatarczuch, L ; Ansari, N ; Crimeen-Irwin, B ; Huynh, N ; Forwood, MR ; Hu, Y ; Ikegame, M ; Bambery, KR ; Petibois, C ; Mackie, EJ ; Tobin, MJ ; Smyth, GK ; Oakhill, JS ; Martin, TJ ; Sims, NA (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2019-11-04)
    An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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    Increased autophagy in EphrinB2-deficient osteocytes is associated with elevated secondary mineralization and brittle bone
    Vrahnas, C ; Blank, M ; Dite, TA ; Tatarczuch, L ; Ansari, N ; Crimeen-Irwinl, B ; Huynh, N ; Forwood, MR ; Hu, Y ; Ikegame, M ; Bambery, KR ; Petibois, C ; Mackie, EJ ; Tobin, MJ ; Smyth, GK ; Oakhill, JS ; Martin, TJ ; Sims, NA (Nature Research (part of Springer Nature), 2019-07-31)
    Mineralized bone forms when collagen-containing osteoid accrues mineral crystals. This is initiated rapidly (primary mineralization), and continues slowly (secondary mineralization) until bone is remodeled. The interconnected osteocyte network within the bone matrix differentiates from bone-forming osteoblasts; although osteoblast differentiation requires EphrinB2, osteocytes retain its expression. Here we report brittle bones in mice with osteocyte-targeted EphrinB2 deletion. This is not caused by low bone mass, but by defective bone material. While osteoid mineralization is initiated at normal rate, mineral accrual is accelerated, indicating that EphrinB2 in osteocytes limits mineral accumulation. No known regulators of mineralization are modified in the brittle cortical bone but a cluster of autophagy-associated genes are dysregulated. EphrinB2-deficient osteocytes displayed more autophagosomes in vivo and in vitro, and EphrinB2-Fc treatment suppresses autophagy in a RhoA-ROCK dependent manner. We conclude that secondary mineralization involves EphrinB2-RhoA-limited autophagy in osteocytes, and disruption leads to a bone fragility independent of bone mass.
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    The DNA Helicase Recql4 Is Required for Normal Osteoblast Expansion and Osteosarcoma Formation
    Ng, AJM ; Walia, MK ; Smeets, MF ; Mutsaers, AJ ; Sims, NA ; Purton, LE ; Walsh, NC ; Martin, TJ ; Walkley, CR ; Elefteriou, F (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2015-04)
    RECQL4 mutations are associated with Rothmund Thomson Syndrome (RTS), RAPADILINO Syndrome and Baller-Gerold Syndrome. These patients display a range of benign skeletal abnormalities such as low bone mass. In addition, RTS patients have a highly increased incidence of osteosarcoma (OS). The role of RECQL4 in normal adult bone development and homeostasis is largely uncharacterized and how mutation of RECQL4 contributes to OS susceptibility is not known. We hypothesised that Recql4 was required for normal skeletal development and both benign and malignant osteoblast function, which we have tested in the mouse. Recql4 deletion in vivo at the osteoblastic progenitor stage of differentiation resulted in mice with shorter bones and reduced bone volume, assessed at 9 weeks of age. This was associated with an osteoblast intrinsic decrease in mineral apposition rate and bone formation rate in the Recql4-deficient cohorts. Deletion of Recql4 in mature osteoblasts/osteocytes in vivo, however, did not cause a detectable phenotype. Acute deletion of Recql4 in primary osteoblasts or shRNA knockdown in an osteoblastic cell line caused failed proliferation, accompanied by cell cycle arrest, induction of apoptosis and impaired differentiation. When cohorts of animals were aged long term, the loss of Recql4 alone was not sufficient to initiate OS. We then crossed the Recql4fl/fl allele to a fully penetrant OS model (Osx-Cre p53fl/fl). Unexpectedly, the Osx-Cre p53fl/flRecql4fl/fl (dKO) animals had a significantly increased OS-free survival compared to Osx-Cre p53fl/fl or Osx-Cre p53fl/flRecql4fl/+ (het) animals. The extended survival was explained when the Recql4 status in the tumors that arose was assessed, and in no case was there complete deletion of Recql4 in the dKO OS. These data provide a mechanism for the benign skeletal phenotypes of RECQL4 mutation syndromes. We propose that tumor suppression and osteosarcoma susceptibility are most likely a function of mutant, not null, alleles of RECQL4.
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    Coupling signals between the osteoclast and osteoblast how are messages transmitted between these temporary visitors to the bone surface?
    Sims, NA ; Martin, TJ (FRONTIERS MEDIA SA, 2015-03-24)
    Skeletal mass is regulated by two key activities: bone removal (resorption) by hematopoietic lineage osteoclasts and bone matrix formation by mesenchymal lineage osteoblasts. During adult life, these activities occur sequentially on the same surface: a process termed as remodeling. Tiny packets of bone are removed by osteoclasts and replaced by new bone matrix produced by osteoblasts. This continual renewal process allows repair of mechanical imperfections and calcium homeostasis.
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    Bone corticalization requires local SOCS3 activity and is promoted by androgen action via interleukin-6
    Cho, D-C ; Brennan, HJ ; Johnson, RW ; Poulton, IJ ; Gooi, JH ; Tonkin, BA ; McGregor, NE ; Walker, EC ; Handelsman, DJ ; Martin, TJ ; Sims, NA (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2017-10-09)
    Long bone strength is determined by its outer shell (cortical bone), which forms by coalescence of thin trabeculae at the metaphysis (corticalization), but the factors that control this process are unknown. Here we show that SOCS3-dependent cytokine expression regulates bone corticalization. Young male and female Dmp1Cre.Socs3 f/f mice, in which SOCS3 has been ablated in osteocytes, have high trabecular bone volume and poorly defined metaphyseal cortices. After puberty, male mice recover, but female corticalization is still impaired, leading to a lasting defect in bone strength. The phenotype depends on sex-steroid hormones: dihydrotestosterone treatment of gonadectomized female Dmp1Cre.Socs3 f/f mice restores normal cortical morphology, whereas in males, estradiol treatment, or IL-6 deletion, recapitulates the female phenotype. This suggests that androgen action promotes metaphyseal corticalization, at least in part, via IL-6 signaling.The strength of long bones is determined by coalescence of trabeculae during corticalization. Here the authors show that this process is regulated by SOCS3 via a mechanism dependent on IL-6 and expression of sex hormones.
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    Dissociation of Bone Resorption and Bone Formation in Adult Mice with a Non-Functional V-ATPase in Osteoclasts Leads to Increased Bone Strength
    Henriksen, K ; Flores, C ; Thomsen, JS ; Bruel, A-M ; Thudium, CS ; Neutzsky-Wulff, AV ; Langenbach, GEJ ; Sims, N ; Askmyr, M ; Martin, TJ ; Everts, V ; Karsdal, MA ; Richter, J ; Agoulnik, I (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2011-11-07)
    Osteopetrosis caused by defective acid secretion by the osteoclast, is characterized by defective bone resorption, increased osteoclast numbers, while bone formation is normal or increased. In contrast the bones are of poor quality, despite this uncoupling of formation from resorption.To shed light on the effect of uncoupling in adult mice with respect to bone strength, we transplanted irradiated three-month old normal mice with hematopoietic stem cells from control or oc/oc mice, which have defective acid secretion, and followed them for 12 to 28 weeks.Engraftment levels were assessed by flow cytometry of peripheral blood. Serum samples were collected every six weeks for measurement of bone turnover markers. At termination bones were collected for µCT and mechanical testing. An engraftment level of 98% was obtained. From week 6 until termination bone resorption was significantly reduced, while the osteoclast number was increased when comparing oc/oc to controls. Bone formation was elevated at week 6, normalized at week 12, and reduced onwards. µCT and mechanical analyses of femurs and vertebrae showed increased bone volume and bone strength of cortical and trabecular bone.In conclusion, these data show that attenuation of acid secretion in adult mice leads to uncoupling and improves bone strength.
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    Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein Negatively Regulates Tumor Cell Dormancy Genes in a PTHR1/Cyclic AMP-Independent Manner
    Johnson, RW ; Sun, Y ; Ho, PWM ; Chan, ASM ; Johnson, JA ; Pavlos, NJ ; Sims, NA ; Martin, TJ (FRONTIERS MEDIA SA, 2018-05-16)
    Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) expression in breast cancer is enriched in bone metastases compared to primary tumors. Human MCF7 breast cancer cells "home" to the bones of immune deficient mice following intracardiac inoculation, but do not grow well and stain negatively for Ki67, thus serving as a model of breast cancer dormancy in vivo. We have previously shown that PTHrP overexpression in MCF7 cells overcomes this dormant phenotype, causing them to grow as osteolytic deposits, and that PTHrP-overexpressing MCF7 cells showed significantly lower expression of genes associated with dormancy compared to vector controls. Since early work showed a lack of cyclic AMP (cAMP) response to parathyroid hormone (PTH) in MCF7 cells, and cAMP is activated by PTH/PTHrP receptor (PTHR1) signaling, we hypothesized that the effects of PTHrP on dormancy in MCF7 cells occur through non-canonical (i.e., PTHR1/cAMP-independent) signaling. The data presented here demonstrate the lack of cAMP response in MCF7 cells to full length PTHrP(1-141) and PTH(1-34) in a wide range of doses, while maintaining a response to three known activators of adenylyl cyclase: calcitonin, prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), and forskolin. PTHR1 mRNA was detectable in MCF7 cells and was found in eight other human breast and murine mammary carcinoma cell lines. Although PTHrP overexpression in MCF7 cells changed expression levels of many genes, RNAseq analysis revealed that PTHR1 was unaltered, and only 2/32 previous PTHR1/cAMP responsive genes were significantly upregulated. Instead, PTHrP overexpression in MCF7 cells resulted in significant enrichment of the calcium signaling pathway. We conclude that PTHR1 in MCF7 breast cancer cells is not functionally linked to activation of the cAMP pathway. Gene expression responses to PTHrP overexpression must, therefore, result from autocrine or intracrine actions of PTHrP independent of PTHR1, through signals emanating from other domains within the PTHrP molecule.