Old age causes de novo intracortical bone remodeling and porosity in mice.

JCI Insight

Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone Diseases, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, Little Rock, Arkansas, USA.

Published: September 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Decreased cortical thickness and increased cortical porosity contribute to osteoporotic fractures in elderly individuals due to imbalanced bone remodeling by osteoclasts and osteoblasts.
  • Studies show that while mice also experience cortical bone loss with age, this occurs despite sufficient sex steroids, making them an important model for understanding age-related osteoporosis mechanisms.
  • Research demonstrated that disrupting osteoclast activity in mice led to both reduced bone formation and increased cortical porosity, supporting the relevance of mice in studying human osteoporosis.

Article Abstract

Decreased cortical thickness and increased cortical porosity are the key anatomic changes responsible for osteoporotic fractures in elderly women and men. The cellular basis of these changes is unbalanced endosteal and intracortical osteonal remodeling by the osteoclasts and osteoblasts that comprise the basic multicellular units (BMUs). Like humans, mice lose cortical bone with age, but unlike humans, this loss occurs in the face of sex steroid sufficiency. Mice are therefore an ideal model to dissect age-specific osteoporotic mechanisms. Nevertheless, lack of evidence for endosteal or intracortical remodeling in mice has raised questions about their translational relevance. We show herein that administration of the antiosteoclastogenic cytokine osteoprotegerin to Swiss Webster mice ablated not only osteoclasts, but also endosteal bone formation, demonstrating the occurrence of BMU-based endosteal remodeling. Femoral cortical thickness decreased in aged male and female C57BL/6J mice, as well as F1 hybrids of C57BL/6J and BALB/cBy mice. This decrease was greater in C57BL/6J mice, indicating a genetic influence. Moreover, endosteal remodeling became unbalanced because of increased osteoclast and decreased osteoblast numbers. The porosity of the femoral cortex increased with age but was much higher in females of both strains. Notably, the increased cortical porosity resulted from de novo intracortical remodeling by osteon-like structures. Age-dependent cortical bone loss was associated with increased osteocyte DNA damage, cellular senescence, the senescence-associated secretory phenotype, and increased levels of RANKL. The demonstration of unbalanced endosteal and intracortical remodeling in old mice validates the relevance of this animal model to involutional osteoporosis in humans.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5621920PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.93771DOI Listing

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