Hydrogen peroxide is essential for estrogen-deficiency bone loss and osteoclast formation

被引:280
|
作者
Lean, JM [1 ]
Jagger, CJ [1 ]
Kirstein, B [1 ]
Fuller, K [1 ]
Chambers, TJ [1 ]
机构
[1] St George Hosp, Sch Med, Dept Cellular Pathol, London SW17 0RE, England
关键词
D O I
10.1210/en.2004-1021
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
We recently found that estrogen deficiency leads to a lowering of thiol antioxidant defenses in rodent bone. Moreover, administration of agents that increase the concentration in bone of glutathione, the main intracellular antioxidant, prevented estrogen-deficiency bone loss, whereas depletion of glutathione by buthionine sulfoximine administration provoked substantial bone loss. To analyze further the mechanism by which antioxidant defenses modulate bone loss, we have now compared expression of the known antioxidant enzymes in osteoclasts. We found that glutathione peroxidase 1 (Gpx), the enzyme primarily responsible for the intracellular degradation of hydrogen peroxide, is overwhelmingly the predominant antioxidant enzyme expressed by osteoclasts and that its expression was increased in bone marrow macrophages by receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappaB ligand (RANKL) and in osteoclasts by 17beta-estradiol. We therefore tested the effect of overexpression of Gpx in osteoclasts by stable transfection of RAW 264.7 (RAW) cells, which are capable of osteoclastic differentiation in response to RANKL, with a Gpx-expression construct. Osteoclast formation was abolished. The Gpx expression construct also suppressed RANKL-induced nuclear factor-kappaB activation and increased resistance to oxidation of dihydrodichlorofluorescein by exogenous hydrogen peroxide. We therefore tested the role of hydrogen peroxide in the loss of bone caused by estrogen deficiency by administering pegylated catalase to mice. We found that catalase prevented ovariectomy-induced bone loss. These results suggest that hydrogen peroxide is the reactive oxygen species responsible for signaling the bone loss of estrogen deficiency.
引用
收藏
页码:728 / 735
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Estrogen deficiency and bone loss: an inflammatory tale
    Weitzmann, MN
    Pacifici, R
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 2006, 116 (05): : 1186 - 1194
  • [22] Estrogen deficiency, T cells and bone loss
    Pacifici, Roberto
    CELLULAR IMMUNOLOGY, 2008, 252 (1-2) : 68 - 80
  • [23] Pathogenesis of bone loss due to estrogen deficiency
    Suda, T
    Miyaura, C
    OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL, 1997, 7 : 43 - 46
  • [24] Flufenamic acid inhibits osteoclast formation and bone resorption and act against estrogen-dependent bone loss in mice
    Zhang, Shutao
    Huo, Shicheng
    Li, Hui
    Tang, Haozheng
    Nie, Bin'en
    Qu, Xinhua
    Yue, Bing
    INTERNATIONAL IMMUNOPHARMACOLOGY, 2020, 78
  • [25] Normal masticatory function protects the rat mandibular bone from estrogen-deficiency induced osteoporosis
    Mavropoulos, A.
    Rizzoli, R.
    Ammann, P.
    BONE, 2009, 44 (02) : S396 - S396
  • [26] Selective deletion of the membrane-bound colony stimulating factor 1 isoform leads to high bone mass but does not protect against estrogen-deficiency bone loss
    Yao, Gang-Qing
    Wu, Jian-Jun
    Troiano, Nancy
    Zhu, Mei-Ling
    Xiao, Xiao-Yan
    Insogna, Karl
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL METABOLISM, 2012, 30 (04) : 408 - 418
  • [27] Tanshinone I attenuates estrogen-deficiency bone loss via inhibiting RANKL-induced MAPK and NF-κB signaling pathways
    Ma, Chao
    Wang, Zhangzheng
    Mo, Liang
    Wang, Xiaochao
    Zhou, Guangquan
    Yi, Chunzhi
    Niu, Wei
    Liu, Yuhao
    INTERNATIONAL IMMUNOPHARMACOLOGY, 2024, 127
  • [28] Selective deletion of the membrane-bound colony stimulating factor 1 isoform in vivo does not affect estrogen-deficiency bone loss in mice
    Yao, G.
    Wu, J.
    Insogna, K.
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2007, 22 : S71 - S71
  • [29] Selective deletion of the membrane-bound colony stimulating factor 1 isoform leads to high bone mass but does not protect against estrogen-deficiency bone loss
    Gang-Qing Yao
    Jian-Jun Wu
    Nancy Troiano
    Mei-Ling Zhu
    Xiao-Yan Xiao
    Karl Insogna
    Journal of Bone and Mineral Metabolism, 2012, 30 : 408 - 418
  • [30] Normal masticatory function partially protects the rat mandibular bone from estrogen-deficiency induced osteoporosis
    Mavropoulos, Anestis
    Kiliaridis, Stavros
    Rizzoli, Rene
    Ammann, Patrick
    JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS, 2014, 47 (11) : 2666 - 2671