AI Article Synopsis

  • Epigenetic regulation is crucial for skeletal development and the differentiation of osteoblasts, with EZH2 playing a significant role in controlling these processes.
  • Pharmacological inhibition of EZH2 enhances bone formation, but its genetic deletion in early mesenchymal lineage leads to skeletal defects.
  • Conditional knockout of EZH2 in later pre-osteoblast stages yields normal skeletal structures but increases fat in bone marrow and reduces body weight, highlighting its dual role in promoting proliferation while suppressing osteogenic commitment.

Article Abstract

Epigenetic mechanisms control skeletal development and osteoblast differentiation. Pharmacological inhibition of the histone 3 Lys-27 (H3K27) methyltransferase enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) in WT mice enhances osteogenesis and stimulates bone formation. However, conditional genetic loss of early in the mesenchymal lineage ( through excision via promoter-driven Cre) causes skeletal abnormalities due to patterning defects. Here, we addressed the key question of whether controls osteoblastogenesis at later developmental stages beyond patterning. We show that loss in committed pre-osteoblasts by Cre expression via the osterix/ promoter yields phenotypically normal mice. These Ezh2 conditional knock-out mice (Ezh2 cKO) have normal skull bones, clavicles, and long bones but exhibit increased bone marrow adiposity and reduced male body weight. Remarkably, loss results in a low trabecular bone phenotype in young mice as measured by micro-computed tomography and histomorphometry. Thus, affects bone formation stage-dependently. We further show that loss in bone marrow-derived mesenchymal cells suppresses osteogenic differentiation and impedes cell cycle progression as reflected by decreased metabolic activity, reduced cell numbers, and changes in cell cycle distribution and in expression of cell cycle markers. RNA-Seq analysis of cKO calvaria revealed that the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor is the most prominent cell cycle target of Hence, genetic loss of in mouse pre-osteoblasts inhibits osteogenesis in part by inducing cell cycle changes. Our results suggest that serves a bifunctional role during bone formation by suppressing osteogenic lineage commitment while simultaneously facilitating proliferative expansion of osteoprogenitor cells.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6102149PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA118.002983DOI Listing

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