Mutations of SQSTM1 occur in about10% of patients with Paget's disease of bone (PDB), but it is unclear whether they play a causal role or regulate susceptibility to an environmental trigger. Here we show that mice with a proline to leucine mutation at codon 394 of mouse sqstm1 (P394L), equivalent to the P392L SQSTM1 mutation in humans, develop a bone disorder with remarkable similarity to PDB. The P394L mutant mice developed focal bone lesions with increasing age and by 12 months, 14/18 (77%) heterozygotes and 20/21 (95%) homozygotes had lesions, compared with 0/18 (0%) wild-type littermates (P< 0.001). Lesions predominantly affected the lower limbs in an asymmetric manner and were characterized by focal increases in bone turnover, with increased bone resorption and formation, disruption of the normal bone architecture and accumulation of woven bone. Osteoclasts within lesions were larger and more nucleated than normal and some contained nuclear inclusions similar to those observed in human PDB. Osteoclast precursors from P394L mutant mice had increased sensitivity to RANKL in vitro resulting in the generation of osteoclasts that were larger and more nucleated than those generated from wild-type littermates. There was increased expression of sqstm1, autophagy-related gene 5 (atg5) and light chain 3 gene (lc3) in osteoclast precursors and increased LC3-II protein levels in Bafilomycin-treated osteoclasts from P394L mutant mice compared with wild-type suggesting dysregulation of autophagy and enhanced autophagosome formation. These studies demonstrate that SQSTM1 mutations can cause a PDB-like skeletal disorder in the absence of an additional trigger and provide a new disease model for PDB.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddr172 | DOI Listing |
Dis Model Mech
August 2018
Department of Musculoskeletal Biology, Institute of Ageing and Chronic Disease, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L7 8TX, UK
Paget's disease of bone (PDB) is an age-related metabolic bone disorder, characterised by focally increased and disorganised bone remodelling initiated by abnormal and hyperactive osteoclasts. The germline P392L mutation of (encoding p62) is a strong genetic risk factor for PDB in humans, and the equivalent mutation in mice (P394L) causes a PDB-like disorder. However, it is unclear why pagetic lesions become more common with age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bone Miner Res
June 2014
Department of Medicine, Hematology Oncology, Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN.
Measles virus nucleocapsid protein (MVNP) expression in osteoclasts (OCLs) and mutation of the SQSTM1 (p62) gene contribute to the increased OCL activity in Paget's disease (PD). OCLs expressing MVNP display many of the features of PD OCLs. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) production is essential for the pagetic phenotype, because transgenic mice with MVNP targeted to OCLs develop pagetic OCLs and lesions, but this phenotype is absent when MVNP mice are bred to IL-6(-/-) mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Mol Genet
July 2011
Rheumatic Diseases Unit, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Mutations of SQSTM1 occur in about10% of patients with Paget's disease of bone (PDB), but it is unclear whether they play a causal role or regulate susceptibility to an environmental trigger. Here we show that mice with a proline to leucine mutation at codon 394 of mouse sqstm1 (P394L), equivalent to the P392L SQSTM1 mutation in humans, develop a bone disorder with remarkable similarity to PDB. The P394L mutant mice developed focal bone lesions with increasing age and by 12 months, 14/18 (77%) heterozygotes and 20/21 (95%) homozygotes had lesions, compared with 0/18 (0%) wild-type littermates (P< 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Mol Genet
December 2008
Department of Medicine/Hematology-Oncology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA 15240, USA.
Paget's disease of bone (PDB) is the second most common bone disease and is characterized by focal bone lesions which contain large numbers of abnormal osteoclasts (OCLs) and very active normal osteoblasts in a highly osteoclastogenic marrow microenvironment. The etiology of PDB is not well understood and both environmental and genetic causes have been implicated in its pathogenesis. Mutations in the SQSTM1/p62 gene have been identified in up to 30% of Paget's patients.
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