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1.
The effects of granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF), macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF), and interleukin 3 (IL3) on osteoclast formation were tested by incubation of murine hemopoietic cells on plastic coverslips and bone slices with GM-CSF, M-CSF, or IL3, with or without 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3). Osteoclastic differentiation was detected after incubation by scanning electron microscopical examination of bone slices for evidence of osteoclastic excavations, and by autoradiographic assessment of cells for 1,25(OH)2D3-calcitonin (CT) binding. The differentiation of CT-receptor-positive cells preceded bone resorption, but the number that developed correlated with the extent of bone resorption (r = 0.88). M-CSF and GM-CSF substantially reduced bone resorption and CT-receptor-positive cell formation. The degree of inhibition of bone resorption could not be attributed to effects on the function of mature cells, since M-CSF inhibits resorption by such cells only by 50%, and GM-CSF has no effect. GM-CSF inhibited the development of mature function (bone resorption) to a greater extent than it inhibited CT-receptor-positive cell formation. Since CT-receptor expression antedated resorptive function, this suggests that GM-CSF resulted in the formation of reduced numbers of relatively immature osteoclasts. This suggests that it may exert a restraining effect on the maturation of cells undergoing osteoclastic differentiation in response to 1,25(OH)2D3. Conversely, IL3, which also has no effect on mature osteoclasts, by itself induced CT-receptor expression but not bone resorption; in combination with 1,25(OH)2D3 it induced a threefold increase in bone resorption and CT-receptor-positive cells compared with cultures incubated with 1,25(OH)2D3 alone. IL3 did not induce CT-receptors in peritoneal macrophages, blood monocytes, or J 774 cells. The results suggest that IL3 induces only partial maturation of osteoclasts, which is augmented or completed by additional factors such as 1,25(OH)2D3.  相似文献   

2.
Osteoclast formation is dependent on the ability of TGF-beta to enable receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand (RANKL)-induced commitment of hemopoietic precursors to the osteoclastic lineage. The mechanism by which TGF-beta enables formation is unknown. One possibility is that TGF-beta opposes Janus kinase (JAK)/STAT signals generated by inhibitory cytokines such as IFN-beta. The JAK/STAT pathway is activated by cytokines that induce resistance to osteoclast formation, such as IFN-gamma and M-CSF, and the effect of these is opposed by TGF-beta. Recently, a group of STAT-induced factors, termed suppressors of cytokine signaling (SOCS), has been identified that inhibit JAK/STAT signals. Therefore, we tested the ability of TGF-beta to induce SOCS expression in osteoclast precursors and examined the effect of SOCS expression on osteoclast/macrophage lineage commitment. We found that while SOCS mRNA is undetectable in macrophages, osteoclasts express SOCS-3, and TGF-beta up-regulates this expression. Furthermore, TGF-beta rapidly induces sustained SOCS-3 expression in macrophage/osteoclast precursors. To determine whether SOCS-3 plays a role in osteoclast differentiation we expressed SOCS-3 in precursors using a retroviral system. We found that osteoclast differentiation was significantly enhanced in SOCS-3-infected precursors, and SOCS-3 expression enables formation in the presence of anti-TGF-beta Ab. On the other hand, antisense knockdown of SOCS-3 strongly suppressed osteoclast formation and significantly blunted the response to TGF-beta. Moreover, like TGF-beta, SOCS-3 expression opposed the inhibitory effect of IFN-beta. These data suggest that TGF-beta-induced expression of SOCS-3 may represent a mechanism by which TGF-beta suppresses inhibitory cytokine signaling, priming precursors for a role in bone resorption.  相似文献   

3.
Osteoclastic activity induces osteomodulin expression in osteoblasts   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Bone resorption by osteoclasts stimulates bone formation by osteoblasts. To isolate osteoblastic factors coupled with osteoclast activity, we performed microarray and cluster analysis of 8 tissues including bone, and found that among 10,490 genes, osteomodulin (OMD), an extracellular matrix keratan sulfate proteoglycan, was simultaneously induced with osteoclast-specific markers such as MMP9 and Acp5. OMD expression was detected in osteoblasts and upregulated during osteoblast maturation. OMD expression in osteoblasts was also detected immunohistochemically using a specific antibody against OMD. The immunoreactivity against OMD decreased in op/op mice, which lack functional macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) and are therefore defective in osteoclast formation, when compared to wild-type littermates. OMD expression in op/op mice was upregulated by M-CSF treatment. Since the M-CSF receptor c-Fms was not expressed in osteoblasts, it is likely that OMD is an osteoblast maturation marker that is induced by osteoclast activity.  相似文献   

4.
Differentiation of osteoclasts, the cells primarily responsible for bone resorption, is controlled by a variety of osteotropic hormones and cytokines. Of these factors, receptor activator of NF-kappaB (RANK) ligand (RANKL) has been recently cloned as an essential inducer of osteoclastogenesis in the presence of M-CSF. Here, we isolated a stroma-free population of monocyte/macrophage (M/Mphi)-like hemopoietic cells from mouse unfractionated bone cells that were capable of differentiating into mature osteoclasts by treatment with soluble RANKL (sRANKL) and M-CSF. However, the efficiency of osteoclast formation was low, suggesting the requirement for additional factors. The isolated M/Mphi-like hemopoietic cells expressed TGF-beta and type I and II receptors of TGF-beta. Therefore, we examined the effect of TGF-beta on osteoclastogenesis. TGF-beta with a combination of sRANKL and M-CSF promoted the differentiation of nearly all M/Mphi-like hemopoietic cells into cells of the osteoclast lineage. Neutralizing anti-TGF-beta Ab abrogated the osteoclast generation. These TGF-beta effects were also observed in cultures of unfractionated bone cells, and anti-TGF-beta blocked the stimulatory effect of 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3). Translocation of NF-kappaB into nuclei induced by sRANKL in TGF-beta-pretreated M/Mphi-like hemopoietic cells was greater than that in untreated cells, whereas TGF-beta did not up-regulate the expression of RANK, the receptor of RANKL. Our findings suggest that TGF-beta is an essential autocrine factor for osteoclastogenesis.  相似文献   

5.
We previously reported that macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF, CSF-1) played important roles in the process of the repopulation of Kupffer cells after their elimination by administration of liposome-entrapped dichloromethylene diphosphonate (lipo-MDP). In this study, we examined the repopulation of Kupffer cells and splenic red pulp macrophages in osteopetrotic (op/op) mice defective in the production of functional M-CSF and their littermate mice by using the lipo-MDP model. In untreated op/op mice, numbers of F4/80-positive Kupffer cells in the liver and F4/80-positive splenic red pulp macrophages were reduced. Repopulation of Kupffer cells and splenic macrophages was observed in littermate (op/+) mice liver by 14 days after depletion. However, in op/op mice, repopulation of Kupffer cells was not observed in Kupffer-cell-depleted op/op mice until 56 days after depletion, whereas splenic red pulp macrophages repopulated and recovered to the level of control op/op mice by 10 days after depletion. Single injection of M-CSF was effective for the induction of the repopulation of Kupffer cells, and daily administration of M-CSF induced remarkable repopulation and maturation of Kupffer cells and proliferation of macrophage precursor cells in the liver of Kupffer-cell-depleted op/op mice. These results suggest that Kupffer cells are completely M-CSF-dependent tissue macrophages, whereas splenic red pulp macrophages are composed of M-CSF-dependent macrophages and M-CSF-independent macrophages. This mouse model provides a useful tool for the study of effects of growth factor on Kupffer cell differentiation in vivo. This study was supported in part by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture of Japan, NIH grant CA20408, and a Tsukada Memorial Grant (2000).  相似文献   

6.
TNF-related activation-induced cytokine (TRANCE; also called receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand (RANKL), osteoclast differentiation factor (ODF), osteoprotegerin ligand (OPGL), and TNFSF11) induces the differentiation of progenitors of the mononuclear phagocyte lineage into osteoclasts in the presence of M-CSF. Surprisingly, in view of its potent ability to induce inflammation and activate macrophage cytocidal function, TNF-alpha has also been found to induce osteoclast-like cells in vitro under similar conditions. This raises questions concerning both the nature of osteoclasts and the mechanism of lineage choice in mononuclear phagocytes. We found that, as with TRANCE, the macrophage deactivator TGF-beta(1) strongly promoted TNF-alpha-induced osteoclast-like cell formation from immature bone marrow macrophages. This was abolished by IFN-gamma. However, TRANCE did not share the ability of TNF-alpha to activate NO production or heighten respiratory burst potential by macrophages, or induce inflammation on s.c. injection into mice. This suggests that TGF-beta(1) promotes osteoclast formation not only by inhibiting cytocidal behavior, but also by actively directing TNF-alpha activation of precursors toward osteoclasts. The osteoclast appears to be an equivalent, alternative destiny for precursors to that of cytocidal macrophage, and may represent an activated variant of scavenger macrophage.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Colony stimulating factors (CSFs) regulate the survival, proliferation and differentiation of haemopoietic progenitor cells, as well as the functional activity of mature cells. Because the osteoclast is derived from haemopoietic tissue, and because osteoblastic cells produce CSFs, we tested the effects of several CSFs on bone resorption by osteoclasts disaggregated from neonatal rat long bone. We found that recombinant macrophage (M)-CSF was a potent inhibitor of bone resorption, causing significant inhibition at concentrations similar to those required to support the growth of macrophage colonies in agar. Unlike other inhibitors of osteoclastic resorption, M-CSF did not alter cytoplasmic motility in time-lapse recordings, suggesting that M-CSF may inhibit osteoclasts through a different transduction mechanism. None of the remaining cytokines tested (granulocyte-macrophage CSF, interleukin 3, interleukin 6, or interferon γ) influenced bone resorption. M-CSF production may be a mechanism by which osteoblastic cells, which produce M-CSF, may regulate osteoclastic function. Alternatively, inhibition of osteoclastic resorption by a CSF that is responsible for amplification of the macrophage compartment may reflect a close lineage relationship between mononuclear phagocytes, in which M-CSF induces a diversion of lineage resources away from osteoclastic function.  相似文献   

9.
10.
There are clones of myeloid leukemic cells that can be induced to undergo terminal cell differentiation to macrophages by normal hemopoietic regulatory proteins. Induction of differentiation in two different clones of myeloid leukemic cells with interleukin 6 (IL-6) or granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) resulted in induction of mRNA for the hemopoietic regulatory proteins IL-6, GM-CSF, interleukin 1 alpha and interleukin 1 beta, tumor necrosis factor, and transforming growth factor beta 1. In one of these clones, induction of differentiation with GM-CSF was also associated with induction of mRNA for macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) but not for the receptor for M-CSF (c-fms), whereas in the other clone, induction of differentiation with IL-6 was associated with induction of mRNA for both c-fms and M-CSF. The clones also differed in their responsiveness to these regulators. There was no induction of mRNA for granulocyte colony-stimulating factor or interleukin 3 during differentiation of either clone. The results indicate that the genes for a nearly normal network of positive and negative hemopoietic regulatory proteins are induced during differentiation of these myeloid leukemic cells and that there are leukemic clones with specific defects in this network.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Stimulation by toll-like receptors inhibits osteoclast differentiation   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Osteoclasts, the cells capable of resorbing bone, are derived from hemopoietic precursor cells of monocyte-macrophage lineage. The same precursor cells can also give rise to macrophages and dendritic cells, which are essential for proper immune responses to various pathogens. Immune responses to microbial pathogens are often triggered because various microbial components induce the maturation and activation of immunoregulatory cells such as macrophages or dendritic cells by stimulating Toll-like receptors (TLRs). Since osteoclasts arise from the same precursors as macrophages, we tested whether TLRs play any role during osteoclast differentiation. We showed here that osteoclast precursors prepared from mouse bone marrow cells expressed all known murine TLRs (TLR1-TLR9). Moreover, various TLR ligands (e.g., peptidoglycan, poly(I:C) dsRNA, LPS, and CpG motif of unmethylated DNA, which act as ligands for TLR2, 3, 4, and 9, respectively) induced NF-kappa B activation and up-regulated TNF-alpha production in osteoclast precursor cells. Unexpectedly, however, TLR stimulation of osteoclast precursors by these microbial products strongly inhibited their differentiation into multinucleated, mature osteoclasts induced by TNF-related activation-induced cytokine. Rather, TLR stimulation maintained the phagocytic activity of osteoclast precursors in the presence of osteoclastogenic stimuli M-CSF and TNF-related activation-induced cytokine. Taken together, these results suggest that TLR stimulation of osteoclast precursors inhibits their differentiation into noninflammatory mature osteoclasts during microbial infection. This process favors immune responses and may be critical to prevent pathogenic effects of microbial invasion on bone.  相似文献   

13.
Summary A “sequential culture step” system was devised to study osteoclast differentiation from newborn porcine bone marrow cells. Nonadherent cells were collected from cultures of bone marrow cells, and subsequently precultured at a low cell density in low-serum medium supplemented with L929-conditioned medium (L9-CM) derived M-CSF/CSF-1. After 4 d, adherent cells mainly composed of M-CSF-dependent macrophage/osteoclast progenitors, but devoid of stromal-like cells, were further cultured in medium supplemented with L9-CM and CM derived from serum-free cultures of fetal rat calvarial bones. This phase was characterized by a rapid induction of mono- and multinucleated (pre)osteoclast-like cells, positive for cytochemical TRAP activity, but negative for nonspecific esterase (NSE) staining. The presence of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D3] stimulated osteoclast generation, whereas calcitonin treatment significantly inhibited this process. The osteoclastic nature of the cells was confirmed by the occurrence of extensive, characteristic bone resorption on dentin slices, which was associated with release of type I collagen N-telopeptides from the bone matrix into the culture medium. The presence of a DNA synthesis inhibitor (HU) during the first 3 d of culture completely inhibited osteoclast formation, whereas HU treatment during the last phase did not affect production of multinucleated osteoclast-like cells. Likewise, a specific antibody directed against M-CSF during the first preculture period, completely abolished osteoclast formation. Adding the antibody during the last phase of the culture, however, strongly inhibited multinucleated osteoclast formation, accompanied by a significant increase in a mononuclear TRAP-positive, NSE-positive (osteoclast precursor) cell fraction. These results indicate that M-CSF is essential for progenitor proliferation as well as for (pre)osteoclast maturation and/or fusion into multinucleated cells, but also suggest that additional soluble (bone-derived) factors are involved as cofactors in the differentiation process to committed mononuclear osteoclast precursors. The porcine marrow culture approach provides a suitable model system to investigate specific soluble osteoclast-inducing factors affecting different stages of osteoclast development.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Osteoclast progenitors differentiate into mature osteoclasts in the presence of receptor activator of NF-kappaB (RANK) ligand on stromal or osteoblastic cells and monocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF). The soluble RANK ligand induces the same differentiation in vitro without stromal cells. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), a potent cytokine involved in the regulation of osteoclast activity, promotes bone resorption via a primary effect on osteoblasts; however, it remains unclear whether TNF-alpha can also directly induce the differentiation of osteoclast progenitors into mature osteoclasts. This study revealed that TNF-alpha directly induced the formation of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP)-positive multinucleated cells (MNCs), which produced resorption pits on bone in vitro in the presence of M-CSF. The bone resorption activity of TNF-alpha-induced MNCs was lower than that of soluble RANK ligand-induced MNCs; however, interleukin-1beta stimulated this activity of TNF-alpha-induced MNCs without an increase in the number of MNCs. In this case, interleukin-1beta did not induce TRAP-positive MNC formation. The osteoclast progenitors expressed TNF receptors, p55 and p75; and the induction of TRAP-positive MNCs by TNF-alpha was inhibited completely by an anti-p55 antibody and partially by an anti-p75 antibody. Our findings presented here are the first to indicate that TNF-alpha is a crucial differentiation factor for osteoclasts. Our results suggest that TNF-alpha and M-CSF play an important role in local osteolysis in chronic inflammatory diseases.  相似文献   

16.
Fusion and activation of osteoclasts are the final two events in osteoclastic bone resorption. To investigate the regulatory mechanism of these events, mononuclear osteoclasts (preosteoclasts, pOCs) were isolated from co-cultures of mouse osteoblastic cells and bone marrow cells. Most of the pOCs cultured without any additives died within 12 h. Survival of pOCs was supported by addition of either osteoblastic cells or macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF). pOCs began to fuse with each other after culture for 12 h in the presence of osteoblastic cells or M-CSF. However, the properties of multinucleated osteoclast-like cells (OCLs) induced by osteoblastic cells were considerably different from those induced by M-CSF. Fusion of pOCs induced by osteoblastic cells was retarded after culture for 24 h. In contrast, M-CSF-induced fusion of pOCs continued throughout the 48-h culture period, which was not inhibited by addition of calcitonin. When pOCs together with osteoblastic cells were cultured for 48 h on dentine slices, many resorption pits were formed on the slices. Calcitonin completely inhibited the fusion and pit-forming activity of pOCs treated with osteoblastic cells. Resorption pits were hardly detected on dentine slices in pOC cultures treated with M-CSF. Osteoblastic cells prepared from osteopetrotic (op/op) mice, which cannot produce functional M-CSF, stimulated the fusion and pit-forming activity of pOCs. Recombinant RANKL (receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand), a cytokine which is produced by osteoblastic cells and is responsible for osteoclast differentiation, induced the fusion and pit-forming activity of pOCs. These results suggested that osteoblastic cells are involved in fusion and activation of osteoclasts through a mechanism independent of M-CSF production. RANKL appears to be responsible for fusion and activation of osteoclasts induced by osteoblastic cells.  相似文献   

17.
In inflammatory arthritis such as RA, osteoclastic activity is severely enhanced. GM-CSF was reportedly elevated in synovial fluid, but is a strong inhibitor of osteoclastogenesis; here lies a contradiction. Our objective was to examine what type of osteoclasts generate and resorb bone with resistance to GM-CSF in an inflammatory joint. Monocyte-derived cells generated in GM-CSF were morphologically and immunophenotypically different from both the conventional DC and macrophage. They could differentiate into osteoclasts in the presence of RANKL + M-CSF, acquiring a stronger osteoclastic activity under TNF treatment. Furthermore, their differentiation was not inhibited by GM-CSF, while monocyte-derived osteoclast differentiation was completely inhibited. The resorption was suppressed by GM-CSF, and the existence of another osteoclastic pathway has been suggested. Our findings indicate another type of osteoclast exists in inflammatory arthritis.  相似文献   

18.
Osteoclasts are the cells that resorb bone. It is generally presumed, on the basis of indirect experiments, that they are derived from the hemopoietic stem cell. However, this origin has never been established. We have developed an assay for osteoclastic differentiation in which bone marrow cells are incubated in liquid culture on slices of cortical bone. The bone slices are inspected in the scanning electron microscope after incubation for the presence of excavations, which are characteristic of osteoclastic activity. We have now incubated bone marrow cells at low density, or a factor-dependent mouse hemopoietic cell line (FDCP-mix A4) with 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 (a hormone which we have previously found induces osteoclastic differentiation) with and without murine bone marrow stromal cells, or with and without 3T3 cells, on bone slices. Neither the bone marrow cells nor the bone marrow stromal cells alone developed osteoclastic function even in the presence of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3. However, extensive excavation of the bone surface was observed, only in the presence of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3, on bone slices on which bone marrow stromal cells were cocultured with low-density bone marrow cells or the hemopoietic cell line. Similar results were obtained when the bone marrow stromal cells were killed by glutaraldehyde fixation; 3T3 cells were unable to substitute for stromal cells. These results are strong evidence that osteoclasts derive from the hemopoietic stem cell and suggest that although mature osteoclasts possess neither receptors for nor responsiveness to 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3, the hormone induces osteoclastic function through a direct effect on hemopoietic cells rather than through some accessory cell in the bone marrow stroma. The failure of 3T3 cells, which enable differentiation of other hemopoietic progeny from this cell line, to induce osteoclastic differentiation suggests that bone marrow stroma possesses additional characteristics distinct from those that induce differentiation of other hemopoietic cells that are specifically required for osteoclastic differentiation.  相似文献   

19.
Generation of macrophages from early T progenitors in vitro   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Early T progenitors in the thymus have been reported to have the capacity to develop into B cells, thymic dendritic cells, and NK cells. Here we describe conditions that induce early T progenitors to develop into macrophages. Initially, we observed that early T progenitors could be induced to develop into macrophages by cytokines produced from a thymic stromal cell line, TFGD, and later we found that the cytokine mixture of M-CSF plus IL-6 plus IL-7 also induced macrophage differentiation from pro-T cells. M-CSF by itself was unable to induce macrophage differentiation from early T progenitors. To correlate this observation with the developmental potential of early T progenitors, mouse embryonic thymocytes were sorted into four populations, pro-T1 to pro-T4, based on the expression of CD44 and CD25, and then cultured with TFGD culture supernatant. We found that pro-T1 and pro-T2 cells, but not pro-T3 and pro-T4 cells, generate macrophages. Limiting dilution analysis of the differentiation capability of sorted pro-T2 cells also confirmed that pro-T2 cells could generate macrophages. These results suggest that T cells and thymic macrophages could originate from a common intrathymic precursor.  相似文献   

20.
Osteoclasts are bone-resorptive multinucleated cells that are differentiated from hemopoietic cell lineages of monocyte/macrophages in the presence of receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand (RANKL) and M-CSF. Downstream signaling molecules of the receptor of RANKL, RANK, modulate the differentiation and the activation of osteoclasts. We recently found that histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDIs), known as anticancer agents, selectively suppressed osteoclastogenesis in vitro. However, the molecular mechanism underlying inhibitory action of HDIs in osteoclastogenesis and the effect of HDIs on pathological bone destruction are still not remained to be elucidated. In this study, we show that a depsipeptide, FR901228, inhibited osteoclast differentiation by not only suppressing RANKL-induced nuclear translocation of NFATc1 but also increasing the mRNA level of IFN-beta, an inhibitor of osteoclastogenesis. The inhibition of osteoclast formation by FR901228 was abrogated by the addition of IFN-beta-neutralizing Ab. In addition, treatment of adjuvant-induced arthritis in rats revealed that FR901228 inhibited not only disease development in a prophylactic model but also bone destruction in a therapeutic model. Furthermore, immunostaining of the joints of therapeutically treated rats revealed significant production of IFN-beta in synovial cells. Taken together, these data suggest that a HDI inhibits osteoclastogenesis and bone destruction by a novel action to induce the expression of osteoclast inhibitory protein, IFN-beta.  相似文献   

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