4.6 Article

Calreticulin mediated glucocorticoid receptor export is involved in β-catenin translocation and Wnt signalling inhibition in human osteoblastic cells

Journal

BONE
Volume 44, Issue 4, Pages 555-565

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2008.11.013

Keywords

Osteoblast; Glucocorticoids; Wnt signalling; beta-catenin; Calreticulin

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Writ signalling pathway is a multicomponent cascade involving interaction of several proteins and found to be important for development and function of various cells and tissues. There is increasing evidence that the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway constitutes also one of the essential molecular mechanisms controlling the metabolic aspects of osteoblastic cells. However, in bone, glucocorticoids (GCs) have been reported to weaken Wilt signalling. Therefore, the aim of this study was to characterize the mechanisms behind the cross-talk of these two signalling pathways in human osteoblastic cells. Based on Our findings, liganded glucocorticoid receptor (GR) modulated Wilt signalling pathway by decreasing beta-catenin's nuclear accumulation and increasing its relocalization to cell membranes rather than affecting its degradation in human osteoblastic cells. The region of GR responsible for this inhibitory effect located into an area which, harbours the DNA binding as well as nuclear export domains. In further Studies, a chaperone protein calreticulin (CRT), known to bind the DNA binding domain of GR and regulate receptor export, was found to be involved in the GR-mediated downregulation of Wilt signalling: GR mutants containing incomplete CRT binding sites were not able to translocate beta-catenin to cell surface. In addition, the inhibitory effect of GCs on endogenous Wnt target gene, cyclin D1, was abolished, when the expression of CRT was attenuated by the RNAi technique. Furthermore, GR and beta-catenin were shown to exist in the same immunocomplex, while interaction between CRT and beta-catenin was observed only in the presence of GR as a mediator molecule. In addition, the GR mutant lacking CRT binding ability impaired the complex formation between beta-catenin and CRT. Together with GR, beta-catenin could thus be co-transported from the nucleus in a CRT-dependent way. These observations represent a novel mechanism for GCs to downregulate Wilt signalling pathway in human osteoblastic cells. Knowledge of these molecular mechanisms is important for understanding the network of Multiple signalling cascades in bone environment. Functional Wilt signalling pathway is a prerequisite for proper osteoblastogenesis, and this modulative cross-talk between the steroid pathway and Writ cascade could therefore explain some of the two-edged effects of GCs or osteoblastic differentiation and function. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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