Login / Signup

Control of osteocyte dendrite formation by Sp7 and its target gene osteocrin.

Jialiang S WangTushar KamathCourtney M MazurFatemeh MirzamohammadiDaniel RotterHironori HojoChristian D CastroNicha TokavanichRushi PatelNicolas GoveaTetsuya EnishiYunshu WuJanaina Da Silva MartinsMichael BruceDaniel J BrooksMary L BouxseinDanielle TokarzCharles P LinAbdul AbdulEvan Z MacoskoMelissa FiscalettiCraig F MunnsPearl RyderMaria Kost-AlimovaPatrick ByrneBeth A CiminiMakoto FujiwaraHenry M KronenbergMarc N Wein
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Some osteoblasts embed within bone matrix, change shape, and become dendrite-bearing osteocytes. The circuitry that drives dendrite formation during "osteocytogenesis" is poorly understood. Here we show that deletion of Sp7 in osteoblasts and osteocytes causes defects in osteocyte dendrites. Profiling of Sp7 target genes and binding sites reveals unexpected repurposing of this transcription factor to drive dendrite formation. Osteocrin is a Sp7 target gene that promotes osteocyte dendrite formation and rescues defects in Sp7-deficient mice. Single-cell RNA-sequencing demonstrates defects in osteocyte maturation in the absence of Sp7. Sp7-dependent osteocyte gene networks are associated with human skeletal diseases. Moreover, humans with a SP7R316C mutation show defective osteocyte morphology. Sp7-dependent genes that mark osteocytes are enriched in neurons, highlighting shared features between osteocytic and neuronal connectivity. These findings reveal a role for Sp7 and its target gene Osteocrin in osteocytogenesis, revealing that pathways that control osteocyte development influence human bone diseases.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • genome wide
  • genome wide identification
  • transcription factor
  • copy number
  • endothelial cells
  • dna methylation
  • multiple sclerosis
  • spinal cord injury
  • gene expression
  • mouse model
  • high throughput
  • soft tissue