AI Article Synopsis

  • CCN1/Cyr61 is a key protein involved in bone maintenance, with studies showing its absence leads to reduced bone mass due to increased sclerostin levels that inhibit Wnt signaling.
  • Research reveals that osteoblasts lacking CCN1 show impaired response to parathyroid hormone (PTH), which is normally involved in bone growth, due to decreased expression of the PTH receptor.
  • The study highlights that a specific region of CCN1 that interacts with certain integrins is essential for activating PTH signaling, suggesting that this interaction plays a crucial role in bone cell function.

Article Abstract

CCN1/Cyr61 is a dynamically expressed matricellular protein that serves regulatory functions in multiple tissues. Previous studies from our laboratory demonstrated that CCN1 regulates bone maintenance. Using an osteoblast and osteocyte conditional knockout mouse model (Ccn1 ), we found a significant decrease in trabecular and cortical bone mass in vivo, in part through suppression of Wnt signaling since the expression of the Wnt antagonist sclerostin (SOST) is increased in osteoblasts lacking CCN1. It has been established that parathyroid hormone (PTH) signaling also suppresses SOST expression in bone. We therefore investigated the interaction between CCN1 and PTH-mediated responses in this study. We find that loss of Ccn1 in osteoblasts leads to impaired responsiveness to anabolic intermittent PTH treatment in Ccn1 mice in vivo and in osteoblasts from these mice in vitro. Analysis of Ccn1 mice demonstrated a significant decrease in parathyroid hormone receptor-1 (PTH1R) expression in osteoblasts in vivo and in vitro. We investigated the regulatory role of a non-canonical integrin-binding domain of CCN1 because several studies indicate that specific integrins are critical to mechanotransduction, a PTH-dependent response, in bone. These data suggest that CCN1 regulates the expression of PTH1R through interaction with the αvβ3 and/or αvβ5 integrin complexes. Osteoblasts that express a mutant form of CCN1 that cannot interact with αvβ3/β5 integrin demonstrate a significant decrease in mRNA and protein expression of both PTH1R and αv integrin. Overall, these data suggest that the αvβ3/β5-binding domain of CCN1 is required to endow PTH signaling with anabolic activity in bone cells. © 2020 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9361511PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jbmr.4128DOI Listing

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