4.6 Article

Mechanical Stretch Induced Calcium Efflux from Bone Matrix Stimulates Osteoblasts

Journal

BONE
Volume 50, Issue 3, Pages 581-591

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.bone.2011.12.015

Keywords

Calcium efflux; Bone matrix; Damage targeting; Mechanochemical transducer; Intracellular calcium; Osteoblast

Funding

  1. NSF [CAREER-0449188]

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The mechanisms by which bone cells sense critically loaded regions of bone are still a matter of ongoing debate. Animal models to investigate response to microdamage involve post mortem immunohistological analysis and do not allow real-time monitoring of cellular response during the emergence of the damage in bone. Most in vitro mechanical stimulation studies are conducted on non-bone substrates, neglecting the damage-related alterations in the pericellular niche and their potential effects on bone cells. The current study reports spontaneous efflux of calcium ions (Ca2+) (1.924 +/- 0.742 pmol cm(-2) s(-1)) from regions of devitalized bone matrix undergoing post-yield strains, induced by a stress concentrator. When these samples are seeded with MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts, the strain-induced Ca2+ efflux from bone elicits cell response at the stress concentration site as manifested by activation of intracellular calcium signaling (increase in fluorescence by 52% +/- 27%). This activity is associated with extracellular calcium because the intracellular calcium signaling in response to mechanical loading subsides when experiments are repeated using demineralized bone substrates (increase in fluorescence by 6% +/- 10%). These results imply a novel perspective where bone matrix acts as an intermediary mechanochemical transducer by converting mechanical strain into a chemical signal (pericellular calcium) to which cells respond. Such a mechanism may be responsible for triggering repair at locations of bone matrix undergoing critical deformation levels. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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