Osteocyte- and late osteoblast-derived NOTUM reduces cortical bone mass in mice.

Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab

Department of Internal Medicine and Clinical Nutrition, Institute of Medicine, Centre for Bone and Arthritis Research at the Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.

Published: May 2021

Osteoporosis is a common skeletal disease, with increased risk of fractures. Currently available osteoporosis treatments reduce the risk of vertebral fractures, mainly dependent on trabecular bone, whereas the effect on nonvertebral fractures, mainly dependent on cortical bone, is less pronounced. WNT signaling is a crucial regulator of bone homeostasis, and the activity of WNTs is inhibited by NOTUM, a secreted WNT lipase. We previously demonstrated that conditional inactivation of NOTUM in all osteoblast lineage cells increases the cortical but not the trabecular bone mass. The aim of the present study was to determine if NOTUM increasing cortical bone is derived from osteoblast precursors/early osteoblasts or from osteocytes/late osteoblasts. First, we demonstrated mRNA expression in expressing osteocytes and late osteoblasts in cortical bone using in situ hybridization. We then developed a mouse model with inactivation of NOTUM in -expressing osteocytes and late osteoblasts ( mice). We observed that the mice displayed a substantial reduction of mRNA in cortical bone, resulting in increased cortical bone mass and decreased cortical porosity in femur but no change in trabecular bone volume fraction in femur or in the lumbar vertebrae L5 in mice as compared with control mice. In conclusion, osteocytes and late osteoblasts are the principal source of NOTUM in cortical bone, and NOTUM derived from osteocytes/late osteoblasts reduces cortical bone mass. These findings demonstrate that inhibition of osteocyte/late osteoblast-derived NOTUM might be an interesting pharmacological target to increase cortical bone mass and reduce nonvertebral fracture risk. NOTUM produced by osteoblasts is known to regulate cortical bone mass. Our new findings show that NOTUM specifically derived by -expressing osteocytes and late osteoblasts regulates cortical bone mass and not trabecular bone mass.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.00565.2020DOI Listing

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