4.6 Article

Ethanol Impairs Estrogen Receptor Signaling Resulting in Accelerated Activation of Senescence Pathways, Whereas Estradiol Attenuates the Effects of Ethanol in Osteoblasts

Journal

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 2, Pages 221-230

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1359/JBMR.081011

Keywords

alcohol; estrogen receptor; osteoblast; senescence

Funding

  1. [R01 AA12928]

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Epidemiological and animal studies have suggested that chronic alcohol consumption is a major risk factor for osteoporosis. Using bone from cycling female rats infused chronically with ethanol (EtOH) in vivo and osteoblastic cells in vitro, we found that EtOH significantly increased estrogen receptor alpha (ER alpha) and beta (ER beta) rnRNA and ER alpha protein levels. Treatment with 17 beta-estradiol (E2) in vivo and in vitro interfered with these effects of EtOH on bone and osteoblastic cells. ER alpha agonist propylpyrazoletriol (PPT) and ER beta agonist diarylpropionitrile (DPN) attenuated EtOH-induced ER alpha and ER beta gene overexpression, respectively. Similar to the ER antagonist ICI 182780, EtOH blocked nuclear translocation of ER alpha-ECFP in the presence of E2 in UMR-106 osteoblastic cells. EtOH also downregulated ERE-luc reporter activity. On the other hand, EtOH by itself upregulated some common ER alpha- and ER beta-mediated genes apparently by art ER-independent pathway. EtOH also transactivated the luciferase activity of the p21 promoter region independent of additional exogenous ER alpha, activated p21 and p53, and stimulated senescence-associated beta-galactosidase activity in rat stromal osteoblasts. E2 treatment attenuated these EtOH actions. We conclude that inhibitory cross-talk between EtOH and E2 in osteoblasts on ERs, p53/p21, and cell senescence provides a pathophysiologic mechanism underlying bone loss and the protective effects of estrogens in alcohol-exposed females.

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