The miR-29-3p family suppresses inflammatory osteolysis.
Bongjin ShinHenry C HrdlickaSangita KarkiBrianna FraserSun-Kyeong LeeAnne M DelanyPublished in: Journal of cellular physiology (2024)
Osteoclasts are the cells primarily responsible for inflammation-induced bone loss, as is particularly seen in rheumatoid arthritis. Increasing evidence suggests that osteoclasts formed under homeostatic versus inflammatory conditions may differ in phenotype. While microRNA-29-3p family members (miR-29a-3p, miR-29b-3p, miR-29c-3p) promote the function of RANKL-induced osteoclasts, the role of miR-29-3p during inflammatory TNF-α-induced osteoclastogenesis is unknown. We used bulk RNA-seq, histology, qRT-PCR, reporter assays, and western blot analysis to examine bone marrow monocytic cell cultures and tissue from male mice in which the function of miR-29-3p family members was decreased by expression of a miR-29-3p tough decoy (TuD) competitive inhibitor in the myeloid lineage (LysM-cre). We found that RANKL-treated monocytic cells expressing the miR-29-3p TuD developed a hypercytokinemia/proinflammatory gene expression profile in vitro, which is associated with macrophages. These data support the concept that miR-29-3p suppresses macrophage lineage commitment and may have anti-inflammatory effects. In correlation, when miR-29-3p activity was decreased, TNF-α-induced osteoclast formation was accentuated in an in vivo model of localized osteolysis and in a cell-autonomous manner in vitro. Further, miR-29-3p targets mouse TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1/Tnfrsf1a), an evolutionarily conserved regulatory mechanism, which likely contributes to the increased TNF-α signaling sensitivity observed in the miR-29-3p decoy cells. Whereas our previous studies demonstrated that the miR-29-3p family promotes RANKL-induced bone resorption, the present work shows that miR-29-3p dampens TNF-α-induced osteoclastogenesis, indicating that miR-29-3p has pleiotropic effects in bone homeostasis and inflammatory osteolysis. Our data supports the concept that the knockdown of miR-29-3p activity could prime myeloid cells to respond to an inflammatory challenge and potentially shift lineage commitment toward macrophage, making the miR-29-3p family a potential therapeutic target for modulating inflammatory response.
Keyphrases
- bone loss
- rheumatoid arthritis
- diabetic rats
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- high glucose
- rna seq
- bone marrow
- inflammatory response
- signaling pathway
- cell cycle arrest
- drug induced
- stem cells
- machine learning
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell therapy
- soft tissue
- gene expression
- cell proliferation
- transcription factor
- long non coding rna
- cell death
- poor prognosis
- lps induced
- immune response
- dna methylation
- electronic health record
- body composition
- big data
- high throughput
- nuclear factor
- long noncoding rna
- pi k akt
- real time pcr