4.6 Article

Osteogenic PTHs and vascular ossification - Is there a danger for osteoporotics?

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 95, Issue 3, Pages 437-444

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcb.20424

Keywords

atherosclerosis; atheroma; bisphosphonates; CVCs (calcifying vascular cells); cholesterolemia; LDL particles; macrophages; MCP-1 chernokine; monocytes; osteoblasts; osteoporosis; pericytes; PTH (parathyroid hormone); PTHrP (parathyroid hormone-related protein); PTH/PTHrP receptor; vascular endothelial cells; vascular ossification; vascular smooth muscle cells

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Inflammation in vascular (mostly arterial) walls and heart valves triggered by the trans-endothelial influx of LDL particles and the action of subsequently modified (e.g., by oxidation) LDL particles can trigger true bone formation by valvar fibroblasts, by a subpopulation of re-differentiation-competent VSMCs (vascular smooth muscle cells) or by vascular pericytes. Vascular ossification can lead to heart failure and death. Elderly osteoporotic women who need osteogenic drugs to restore their lost skeletal bone are paradoxically prone to vascular ossification-the calcification paradox. The recent introduction into the clinic of a potently osteogenic parathyroid hormone peptide, Lilly'srhPTH-(1-34)OH (Forteo(TM)), to reverse skeletal bone loss raises the question of whether this and other potently osteogenic PTHs still in clinical trial might also stimulate vascular ossification in such osteoporotic women. Indeed the VSMCs in human and rat atherosclerotic lesions hyperexpress PTHrP and the PTHR1 (or PTH1 R) receptor as do maturing osteoblasts. And the evidence indicates that endogenous PTHrP with its NLS (nuclear/nucleolar localization sequence) does stimulate VSMC proliferation (a prime prerequisite for atheroma formation and ossification) via intranuclear targets that inactivate pRb, the inhibitory G(1)/S checkpoint regulator, by stimulating its hyperphosphorylation. But neither externally added full-length PTHrP nor the NLS-lacking PTHrP-(1-34)OH gets into the VSMC nucleus and instead they inhibit proliferation and calcification by only activating the cell's PTHR1 receptors. No PTH has an NLS and, as expected from the observations on the externally added PTHrPs, hPTH-(1-34)OH inhibits calcification by VSMCs and cannot stimulate vascular ossification in a diabetic mouse model. Encouraging though this may be for osteoporotics with their calcification paradox, more work is needed to be sure that the skeletally osteogenic PTHs do not promote vascular ossification with its cardiovascular consequences. J. Cell. Biochem. (c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available