4.7 Article

A cholinergic neuroskeletal interface promotes bone formation during postnatal growth and exercise

Journal

CELL STEM CELL
Volume 29, Issue 4, Pages 528-544

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2022.02.008

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH-OXCAM Program
  2. Gates Cam-bridge Trust
  3. La Caixa Foundation
  4. Marie Curie Career Integration grant [H2020-MSCA-IF-2015-70841]
  5. DFG [Se 697/7-1]
  6. BMBF through the EnergI consortium TP6
  7. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [PI12/02574]
  8. Junta de Andalucia [P12-CTS-2739]
  9. Red TerCel (ISCIII-Spanish Cell Therapy Network)
  10. Versus Arthritis [21156]
  11. DIR, NIDCR a part of the IRP
  12. Cambridge NIHR Biomedical Research Centre
  13. MRC
  14. National Health Service Blood and Transplant (United Kingdom)
  15. European Union's Horizon 2020 research [ERC-2014-CoG-648765]
  16. MRC-AMED grant [MR/V005421/1]
  17. Programme Foundation Award from Cancer Research UK [C61367/A26670]
  18. Wellcome Trust [203151/Z/16/Z]
  19. Ramon Areces Foundation
  20. NIH
  21. DHHS [1ZIADE000380]

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The autonomic nervous system plays a crucial role in regulating homeostasis and response to stress. This study reveals the involvement of cholinergic signaling in bone development and function through the interaction between sympathetic cholinergic nerve fibers and osteocytes. Cholinergic innervation is important for osteocyte survival and connectivity, and moderate exercise can enhance bone development by increasing sympathetic cholinergic nerve fibers. Loss of cholinergic skeletal innervation leads to osteopenia and impaired skeletal adaptation to exercise.
The autonomic nervous system is a master regulator of homeostatic processes and stress responses. Sympathetic noradrenergic nerve fibers decrease bone mass, but the role of cholinergic signaling in bone has remained largely unknown. Here, we describe that early postnatally, a subset of sympathetic nerve fibers undergoes an interleukin-6 (IL-6)-induced cholinergic switch upon contacting the bone. A neurotrophic dependency mediated through GDNF-family receptor-a2 (GFRa2) and its ligand, neurturin (NRTN), is established between sympathetic cholinergic fibers and bone-embedded osteocytes, which require cholinergic innervation for their survival and connectivity. Bone-lining osteoprogenitors amplify and propagate cholinergic signals in the bone marrow (BM). Moderate exercise augments trabecular bone partly through an IL-6 -dependent expansion of sympathetic cholinergic nerve fibers. Consequently, loss of cholinergic skeletal innervation reduces osteocyte survival and function, causing osteopenia and impaired skeletal adaptation to moderate exercise. These results uncover a cholinergic neuro-osteocyte interface that regulates skeletogenesis and skeletal turnover through bone-anabolic effects.

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