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name:Partridge, Nicola

school:SOM

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Osteoblastic Monocyte Chemoattractant Protein-1 (MCP-1) Mediation of Parathyroid Hormone's Anabolic Actions in Bone Implicates TGF-β Signaling

Siddiqui, Jawed A; Le Henaff, Carole; Johnson, Joshua; He, Zhiming; Rifkin, Daniel B; Partridge, Nicola C
Parathyroid hormone (PTH) is necessary for the regulation of calcium homeostasis and PTH (1-34) was the first approved osteoanabolic therapy for osteoporosis. It is well established that intermittent PTH increases bone formation and that bone remodeling and several cytokines and chemokines play an essential role in this process. Earlier, we had established that the chemokine, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1/CCL2), was the most highly stimulated gene in rat bone after intermittent PTH injections. Nevertheless, MCP-1 function in bone appears to be complicated. To identify the primary cells expressing MCP-1 in response to PTH, we performed in situ hybridization of rat bone sections after hPTH (1-34) injections and showed that bone-lining osteoblasts are the primary cells that express MCP-1 after PTH treatment. We previously demonstrated MCP-1's importance by showing that PTH's anabolic effects are abolished in MCP-1 null mice, further implicating a role for the chemokine in this process. To establish whether rhMCP-1 peptide treatment could rescue the anabolic effect of PTH in MCP-1 null mice, we treated 4-month-old wild-type (WT) mice with hPTH (1-34) and MCP-1-/- mice with rhMCP-1 and/or hPTH (1-34) for 6 weeks. Micro-computed tomography (μCT) analysis of trabecular and cortical bone showed that MCP-1 injections for 6 weeks rescued the PTH anabolic effect in MCP-1-/- mice. In fact, the combination of rhMCP-1 and hPTH (1-34) has a synergistic anabolic effect compared with monotherapies. Mechanistically, PTH-enhanced transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) signaling is abolished in the absence of MCP-1, while MCP-1 peptide treatment restores TGF-β signaling in the bone marrow. Here, we have shown that PTH regulates the transcription of the chemokine MCP-1 in osteoblasts and determined how MCP-1 affects bone cell function in PTH's anabolic actions. Taken together, our current work indicates that intermittent PTH stimulates osteoblastic secretion of MCP-1, which leads to increased TGF-β signaling, implicating it in PTH's anabolic actions.
PMID: 33212319
ISSN: 1873-2763
CID: 4675492

miR-873-3p targets HDAC4 to stimulate matrix metalloproteinase-13 expression upon parathyroid hormone exposure in rat osteoblasts

Malavkia, Desai; Shreya, Srinivasan; Raj Priya, Vembar; Rohini, Muthukumar; He, Zhiming; Partridge, Nicola C; Selvamurugan, Nagarajan
Matrix metalloproteinase-13 (MMP-13) plays a predominant role in endochondral bone formation and bone remodeling. Parathyroid hormone (PTH) stimulates the expression of MMP-13 via Runx2, a bone transcription factor in rat osteoblastic cells (UMR106-01), and histone deacetylase 4 (HDAC4) acts as a corepressor of Runx2. Moreover, microRNAs (miRNAs) play an important role in regulating genes posttranscriptionally. Here, we hypothesized that PTH upregulates the miRNAs targeting HDAC4, which could lead to increased Runx2 activity and MMP-13 expression in rat osteoblastic cells. We identified several miRNAs that putatively target rat HDAC4 using bioinformatics tools. miR-873-3p was significantly upregulated by PTH in rat osteoblasts. miR-873-3p overexpression downregulated HDAC4 protein expression, increased Runx2 binding at the MMP-13 promoter, and increased MMP-13 messenger RNA expression in UMR106-01 cells. A luciferase reporter assay identified the direct targeting of miR-873-3p at the 3'-untranslated region of HDAC4. Thus, miR-873-3p targeted HDAC4 and relieved the corepressor effect of HDAC4 on Runx2 for MMP-13 expression in rat osteoblasts. This study advances our knowledge of posttranscriptional gene regulation occurring in bone and bone-related diseases and clarifies the role of miRNAs as diagnostic biomarkers.
PMID: 31960421
ISSN: 1097-4652
CID: 4272872

Abaloparatide at the same dose has the same effects on bone as PTH (1-34) in mice

Le Henaff, Carole; Ricarte, Florante; Finnie, Brandon; He, Zhiming; Johnson, Joshua; Warshaw, Johanna; Kolupaeva, Victoria; Partridge, Nicola C
Abaloparatide, a novel analog of parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP 1-34) became, in 2017, the second osteoanabolic therapy for the treatment of osteoporosis. This study aims to compare the effects of PTH (1-34), PTHrP (1-36), and abaloparatide on bone remodeling in male mice. Intermittent daily subcutaneous injections of 80 μg/kg/day were administered to four-month-old C57Bl/6J male mice for six weeks. During treatment, mice were followed by DEXA-Piximus to assess changes in bone mineral density (BMD) in the whole body, femur and tibia. At either four or eighteen hours after the final injection, femurs were harvested for μCT analyses and histomorphometry, sera were assayed for bone turnover marker levels, and tibiae were separated into cortical, trabecular, and bone marrow fractions for gene expression analyses. Our results showed that, compared with PTH (1-34), abaloparatide resulted in a similar increase in BMD at all sites, while no changes were seen with PTHrP (1-36). With both PTH (1-34) and abaloparatide, μCT and histomorphometry analyses revealed similar increases in bone volume associated with an increased trabecular thickness, in bone formation rate as shown by P1NP serum level and in vivo double labeling, and in bone resorption as shown by CTX levels and osteoclast number. Gene expression analyses of trabecular and cortical bone showed that PTH (1-34) and abaloparatide led to different actions in osteoblast differentiation and activity, with increased Runx2, Col1A1, Alpl, Bsp, Ocn, Sost, Rankl/Opg and c-fos at different time points. Abaloparatide seems to generate a faster response on osteoblastic gene expression than PTH (1-34). Taken together, abaloparatide at the same dose is as effective as PTH (1-34) as an osteoanabolic, with an increase in bone formation but also an increase in bone resorption in male mice. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
PMID: 31793033
ISSN: 1523-4681
CID: 4218282

Osteoblastic Deletion of PKA Regulatory Subunit1A Causes Severe Bone Pathology in Mice [Meeting Abstract]

Le Henaff, Carole; Finnie, Brandon; Johnson, Joshua; Nahaei, Yasaman; He, Zhiming; Dasgupta, Krishnakali; Jeong, Juhee; Warshaw, Johanna; Kronenberg, Henry M.; Kirschner, Lawrence S.; Partridge, Nicola C.
ISI:000593119300093
ISSN: 0884-0431
CID: 4736562

Regulation of CRTC1/2/3 by Protein Phosphatases and Salt-inducible Kinases in Osteoblastic RankL Transcription [Meeting Abstract]

Mosca, Michael; He, Zhiming; Le Henaff, Carole; Partridge, Nicola
ISI:000593119300402
ISSN: 0884-0431
CID: 4736572

Parathyroid Hormones

Chapter by: Le Henaff, Carole; Partridge, Nicola C.
in: Hormonal Signaling in Biology and Medicine: Comprehensive Modern Endocrinology by
[S.l.] : Elsevier, 2019
pp. 507-529
ISBN: 9780128138144
CID: 4421702

Bone proteinases

Chapter by: Nakatani, Teruyo; Partridge, Nicola C.
in: Principles of Bone Biology by
[S.l.] : Elsevier, 2019
pp. 379-399
ISBN: 9780128148419
CID: 4421012

Protein Phosphatases 1 and 2A are Necessary for PTH (1-34) Stimulation of Osteoblastic RANKL Expression Through CREB Regulated Transcription Coactivator 3 [Meeting Abstract]

He, Zhiming; Le Henaff, Carole; Ricarte, Florante; Kolupaeva, Victoria; Partridge, Nicola
ISI:000508614701386
ISSN: 0884-0431
CID: 4337652

Parathyroid hormone (1-34) and its analogs differentially modulate osteoblastic RANKL expression via PKA/PP1/PP2A and SIK2/SIK3-CRTC3 signaling

Ricarte, Florante R; Le Henaff, Carole; Kolupaeva, Victoria G; Gardella, Thomas J; Partridge, Nicola C
Osteoporosis can result from the loss of sex hormones and/or aging. Abaloparatide (ABL), an analog of parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP 1-36), is the second osteoanabolic therapy approved by the US Food and Drug Administration after teriparatide (PTH 1-34). All three peptides bind PTH/PTHrP receptor type 1 (PTHR1), but the effects of PTHrP (1-36) or ABL in the osteoblast remain unclear. We show that, in primary calvarial osteoblasts, PTH (1-34) promotes a more robust cAMP response than PTHrP (1-36) and ABL and causes a greater activation of protein kinase A (PKA) and cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB). All three peptides similarly inhibited sclerostin (SOST). Interestingly, the three peptides differentially modulated two other PKA target genes, c-Fos and receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-B ligand (RANKL), and the latter both in vitro and in vivo. Knockdown of salt-inducible kinases (SIKs) 2 and 3 and CREB-regulated transcription coactivator 3 (CRTC3), indicated that all three are part of the pathway that regulates osteoblastic RANKL expression. We also show that the peptides differentially regulate the nuclear localization of CRTC2 and CRTC3, and that this correlates with PKA activation. Moreover, inhibition of protein phosphatases 1 and 2A (PP1/PP2A) activity revealed that they play a major role in both PTH-induced RANKL expression and the effects of PTH (1-34) on CRTC3 localization. In summary, in the osteoblast, the effects of PTH (1-34), PTHrP (1-36), and ABL on RANKL are mediated by differential stimulation of cAMP/PKA signaling and by their downstream effects on SIK2 and 3, PP1/PP2A, and CRTC3.
PMID: 30377251
ISSN: 1083-351x
CID: 3399712

PTHrP (1-36) and Abaloparatide: Weaker Modulators of SIK2/CRTC2-CRTC3 Signaling Axis Compared with PTH (1-34) [Meeting Abstract]

Ricarte, Florante; Le Henaff, Carole; Partridge, Nicola
ISI:000450475401723
ISSN: 0884-0431
CID: 3536002