4.6 Article

Osteoclast differentiation is impaired in the absence of inhibitor of κB kinase α

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 279, Issue 52, Pages 54841-54848

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M406392200

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Signaling through the receptor activator of nuclear factor kappaB (RANK) is required for both osteoclast differentiation and mammary gland development, yet the extent to which RANK utilizes similar signaling pathways in these tissues remains unclear. Mice expressing a kinase-inactive form of the inhibitor of kappaB kinase alpha(IKKalpha) have mammary gland defects similar to those of RANK-null mice yet have apparently normal osteoclast function. Because mice that completely lack IKKalpha have severe skin and skeletal defects that are not associated with IKKalpha-kinase activity, we wished to directly examine osteoclastogenesis in IKKalpha(-/-) mice. We found that unlike RANK-null mice, which completely lack osteoclasts, IKKalpha(-/-) mice did possess normal numbers of TRAP(+) osteoclasts. However, only 32% of these cells were multinucleated compared with 57% in wild-type littermates. A more profound defect in osteoclastogenesis was observed in vitro using IKKalpha(-/-) hematopoietic cells treated with colony-stimulating factor 1 and RANK ligand ( RANKL), as the cells failed to form large, multinucleated osteoclasts. Additionally, overall RANKL-induced global gene expression was significantly blunted in IKKalpha(-/-) cells, including osteoclast-specific genes such as TRAP, MMP-9, and c-Src. IKKalpha was not required for RANKL-mediated IkappaBalpha degradation or phosphorylation of mitogen-activated protein kinases but was required for RANKL-induced p100 processing. Treatment of IKKalpha(-/-) cells with tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) in combination with RANKL led to partial rescue of osteoclastogenesis despite a lack of p100 processing. However, the ability of TNFalpha alone or in combination with transforming growth factor beta to induce osteoclast differentiation was dependent on IKKalpha, suggesting that synergy between RANKL and TNFalpha can overcome p100 processing defects in IKKalpha(-/-) cells.

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