4.5 Article

N-cadherin and cadherin 11 modulate postnatal bone growth and osteoblast differentiation by distinct mechanisms

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 123, Issue 15, Pages 2640-2648

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.067777

Keywords

Cell-cell adhesion; Osteoporosis; Bone remodeling; Osteoblast differentiation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 AR043470, AR055913]
  2. Endocrine Society
  3. American Society for Bone and Mineral Research
  4. Clinical Nutrition Research Unit, Washington University [P30 DK056341]
  5. Research Center for Auditory and Vestibular Studies Histology Core, Washington University [P30 DC004665]

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We have previously shown that targeted expression of a dominant-negative truncated form of N-cadherin (Cdh2) delays acquisition of peak bone mass in mice and retards osteoblast differentiation; whereas deletion of cadherin 11 (Cdh11), another osteoblast cadherin, leads to only modest osteopenia. To determine the specific roles of these two cadherins in the adult skeleton, we generated mice with an osteoblast/osteocyte specific Cdh2 ablation (cKO) and double Cdh2(+/-); Cdh11(-/-) germline mutant mice. Age-dependent osteopenia and smaller diaphyses with decreased bone strength characterize cKO bones. By contrast, Cdh2(+/-);Cdh11(-/-) exhibit severely reduced trabecular bone mass, decreased in vivo bone formation rate, smaller diaphyses and impaired bone strength relative to single Cdh11 null mice. The number of bone marrow immature precursors and osteoprogenitor cells is reduced in both cKO and Cdh2(+/-);Cdh11(-/-) mice, suggesting that N-cadherin is involved in maintenance of the stromal cell precursor pool via the osteoblast. Although Cdh11 is dispensable for postnatal skeletal growth, it favors osteogenesis over adipogenesis. Deletion of either cadherin reduces beta-catenin abundance and beta-catenin-dependent gene expression, whereas N-cadherin loss disrupts cell-cell adhesion more severely than loss of cadherin 11. Thus, Cdh2 and Cdh11 are crucial regulators of postnatal skeletal growth and bone mass maintenance, serving overlapping, yet distinct, functions in the osteogenic lineage.

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