Epigenetic regulators controlling osteogenic lineage commitment and bone formation.

Bone

Department of Internal Medicine, Erasmus MC, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, Netherlands; Department of Biochemistry, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT, USA. Electronic address:

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Bone development and maintenance are influenced by environmental factors and hormones that activate signaling pathways, affecting gene expression in the nucleus.
  • - Gene expression related to bone is regulated by chromatin structure, which controls the accessibility of DNA sequences necessary for bone formation, especially during early embryonic stages to prevent premature mineralization.
  • - Key epigenetic regulators, including various enzymes, play crucial roles in either promoting or inhibiting bone cell differentiation and function, impacting the behavior of stem cells and their development into bone-forming cells (osteoblasts).

Article Abstract

Bone formation and homeostasis are controlled by environmental factors and endocrine regulatory cues that initiate intracellular signaling pathways capable of modulating gene expression in the nucleus. Bone-related gene expression is controlled by nucleosome-based chromatin architecture that limits the accessibility of lineage-specific gene regulatory DNA sequences and sequence-specific transcription factors. From a developmental perspective, bone-specific gene expression must be suppressed during the early stages of embryogenesis to prevent the premature mineralization of skeletal elements during fetal growth in utero. Hence, bone formation is initially inhibited by gene suppressive epigenetic regulators, while other epigenetic regulators actively support osteoblast differentiation. Prominent epigenetic regulators that stimulate or attenuate osteogenesis include lysine methyl transferases (e.g., EZH2, SMYD2, SUV420H2), lysine deacetylases (e.g., HDAC1, HDAC3, HDAC4, HDAC7, SIRT1, SIRT3), arginine methyl transferases (e.g., PRMT1, PRMT4/CARM1, PRMT5), dioxygenases (e.g., TET2), bromodomain proteins (e.g., BRD2, BRD4) and chromodomain proteins (e.g., CBX1, CBX2, CBX5). This narrative review provides a broad overview of the covalent modifications of DNA and histone proteins that involve hundreds of enzymes that add, read, or delete these epigenetic modifications that are relevant for self-renewal and differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells, skeletal stem cells and osteoblasts during osteogenesis.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bone.2024.117043DOI Listing

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