4.6 Article

Hyperglycemia Diverts Dividing Osteoblastic Precursor Cells to an Adipogenic Pathway and Induces Synthesis of a Hyaluronan Matrix That Is Adhesive for Monocytes

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 16, Pages 11410-11420

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.541458

Keywords

Adipogenesis; Autophagy; Diabetes; ER Stress; Heparin; Inflammation; Stromal Cell; Monocyte Adhesive Hyaluronan Matrix; Osteogenesis; Osteopenia

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 DK62934, P01 HL107147]
  2. NHLBI, National Institutes of Health [P01 HL107147]
  3. Mizutani Foundation [1000057]

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Background: Adipocytes accumulate in diabetic bone marrow. Results: Bone marrow stromal cells that divide in hyperglycemia divert from the osteoblast lineage to pathological adipogenesis and produce an extensive monocyte-adhesive hyaluronan matrix with consequent demineralization of trabecular bone. Conclusion: This mechanism diminishes the stromal cell population with an accumulation of metabolically stressed adipocytes. Significance: This provides new insights into diabetic osteopenia. Isolated rat bone marrow stromal cells cultured in osteogenic medium in which the normal 5.6 mm glucose is changed to hyperglycemic 25.6 mm glucose greatly increase lipid formation between 21-31 days of culture that is associated with decreased biomineralization, up-regulate expression of cyclin D3 and two adipogenic markers (CCAAT/enhancer binding protein and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor ) within 5 days of culture, increase neutral and polar lipid synthesis within 5 days of culture, and form a monocyte-adhesive hyaluronan matrix through an endoplasmic reticulum stress-induced autophagic mechanism. Evidence is also provided that, by 4 weeks after diabetes onset in the streptozotocin-induced diabetic rat model, there is a large loss of trabecular bone mineral density without apparent proportional changes in underlying collagen matrices, a large accumulation of a hyaluronan matrix within the trabecular bone marrow, and adipocytes and macrophages embedded in this hyaluronan matrix. These results support the hypothesis that hyperglycemia in bone marrow diverts dividing osteoblastic precursor cells (bone marrow stromal cells) to a metabolically stressed adipogenic pathway that induces synthesis of a hyaluronan matrix that recruits inflammatory cells and establishes a chronic inflammatory process that demineralizes trabecular cancellous bone.

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