The membrane protein ANKH is crucial for bone mechanical performance by mediating cellular export of citrate and ATP.

PLoS Genet

Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Biology, Jefferson Institute of Molecular Medicine and PXE International Center of Excellence in Research and Clinical Care, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The membrane protein ANKH is essential for preventing pathological joint mineralization by exporting ATP and citrate instead of the previously thought pyrophosphate (PPi).
  • Research demonstrated that ANKH's role leads to the conversion of extracellular ATP into PPi, which helps prevent ankylosis.
  • Mice without functional ANKH had significantly lower plasma and urinary citrate levels, resulting in altered bone matrix composition and strength, highlighting ANKH's importance in maintaining citrate and PPi balance for bone quality.

Article Abstract

The membrane protein ANKH was known to prevent pathological mineralization of joints and was thought to export pyrophosphate (PPi) from cells. This did not explain, however, the presence of ANKH in tissues, such as brain, blood vessels and muscle. We now report that in cultured cells ANKH exports ATP, rather than PPi, and, unexpectedly, also citrate as a prominent metabolite. The extracellular ATP is rapidly converted into PPi, explaining the role of ANKH in preventing ankylosis. Mice lacking functional Ank (Ankank/ank mice) had plasma citrate concentrations that were 65% lower than those detected in wild type control animals. Consequently, citrate excretion via the urine was substantially reduced in Ankank/ank mice. Citrate was even undetectable in the urine of a human patient lacking functional ANKH. The hydroxyapatite of Ankank/ank mice contained dramatically reduced levels of both, citrate and PPi and displayed diminished strength. Our results show that ANKH is a critical contributor to extracellular citrate and PPi homeostasis and profoundly affects bone matrix composition and, consequently, bone quality.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7371198PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008884DOI Listing

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The membrane protein ANKH is crucial for bone mechanical performance by mediating cellular export of citrate and ATP.

PLoS Genet

July 2020

Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Biology, Jefferson Institute of Molecular Medicine and PXE International Center of Excellence in Research and Clinical Care, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America.

Article Synopsis
  • The membrane protein ANKH is essential for preventing pathological joint mineralization by exporting ATP and citrate instead of the previously thought pyrophosphate (PPi).
  • Research demonstrated that ANKH's role leads to the conversion of extracellular ATP into PPi, which helps prevent ankylosis.
  • Mice without functional ANKH had significantly lower plasma and urinary citrate levels, resulting in altered bone matrix composition and strength, highlighting ANKH's importance in maintaining citrate and PPi balance for bone quality.
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