4.5 Article

Activin A inhibits RANKL-mediated osteoclast formation, movement and function in murine bone marrow macrophage cultures

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 128, Issue 4, Pages 683-694

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.157834

Keywords

Osteoclast; Motility; Activin A; INHBA

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R21-DK74024, R01-CA166060]
  2. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Translational Research Institute (TRI) NIH CTSA [1 UL1TR000039]
  3. UAMS Medical Research Foundation
  4. Carl L Nelson Chair in Orthopaedic Creativity
  5. UAMS Graduate Student Educational Research Fellowship

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The process of osteoclastic bone resorption is complex and regulated at multiple levels. The role of osteoclast (OCL) fusion and motility in bone resorption are unclear, with the movement of OCL on bone largely unexplored. RANKL (also known as TNFSF11) is a potent stimulator of murine osteoclastogenesis, and activin A (ActA) enhances that stimulation in whole bone marrow. ActA treatment does not induce osteoclastogenesis in stroma-free murine bone marrow macrophage cultures (BMM), but rather inhibits RANKL-induced osteoclastogenesis. We hypothesized that ActA and RANKL differentially regulate osteoclastogenesis by modulating OCL precursors and mature OCL migration. Time-lapse video microscopy measured ActA and RANKL effects on BMM and OCL motility and function. ActA completely inhibited RANKL-stimulated OCL motility, differentiation and bone resorption, through a mechanism mediated by ActA-dependent changes in SMAD2, AKT1 and inhibitor of nuclear factor kB (IkB) signaling. The potent and dominant inhibitory effect of ActA was associated with decreased OCL lifespan because ActA significantly increased activated caspase-3 in mature OCL and OCL precursors. Collectively, these data demonstrate a dual action for ActA on murine OCLs.

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