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Aged bone matrix-derived extracellular vesicles as a messenger for calcification paradox.

Zhen-Xing WangZhong-Wei LuoFu-Xing-Zi LiJia CaoShan-Shan RaoYi-Wei LiuYi-Yi WangGuo-Qiang ZhuJiang-Shan GongJing-Tao ZouQiang WangYi-Juan TanYan ZhangYin HuYou-You LiHao YinXiao-Kai WangZe-Hui HeLu RenZheng-Zhao LiuXiong-Ke HuLing-Qing YuanRan XuChun-Yuan ChenHui Xie
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Adipocyte differentiation of bone marrow mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (BMSCs) instead of osteoblast formation contributes to age- and menopause-related marrow adiposity and osteoporosis. Vascular calcification often occurs with osteoporosis, a contradictory association called "calcification paradox". Here we show that extracellular vesicles derived from aged bone matrix (AB-EVs) during bone resorption favor BMSC adipogenesis rather than osteogenesis and augment calcification of vascular smooth muscle cells. Intravenous or intramedullary injection of AB-EVs promotes bone-fat imbalance and exacerbates Vitamin D3 (VD3)-induced vascular calcification in young or old mice. Alendronate (ALE), a bone resorption inhibitor, down-regulates AB-EVs release and attenuates aging- and ovariectomy-induced bone-fat imbalance. In the VD3-treated aged mice, ALE suppresses the ovariectomy-induced aggravation of vascular calcification. MiR-483-5p and miR-2861 are enriched in AB-EVs and essential for the AB-EVs-induced bone-fat imbalance and exacerbation of vascular calcification. Our study uncovers the role of AB-EVs as a messenger for calcification paradox by transferring miR-483-5p and miR-2861.
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