Mechanical sensing protein PIEZO1 regulates bone homeostasis via osteoblast-osteoclast crosstalk.
Lijun WangXiuling YouSutada LotinunLingli ZhangNan WuWeiguo ZouPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
Wolff's law and the Utah Paradigm of skeletal physiology state that bone architecture adapts to mechanical loads. These models predict the existence of a mechanostat that links strain induced by mechanical forces to skeletal remodeling. However, how the mechanostat influences bone remodeling remains elusive. Here, we find that Piezo1 deficiency in osteoblastic cells leads to loss of bone mass and spontaneous fractures with increased bone resorption. Furthermore, Piezo1-deficient mice are resistant to further bone loss and bone resorption induced by hind limb unloading, demonstrating that PIEZO1 can affect osteoblast-osteoclast crosstalk in response to mechanical forces. At the mechanistic level, in response to mechanical loads, PIEZO1 in osteoblastic cells controls the YAP-dependent expression of type II and IX collagens. In turn, these collagen isoforms regulate osteoclast differentiation. Taken together, our data identify PIEZO1 as the major skeletal mechanosensor that tunes bone homeostasis.
Keyphrases
- bone loss
- bone mineral density
- bone regeneration
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- postmenopausal women
- cell proliferation
- cell death
- long non coding rna
- oxidative stress
- signaling pathway
- vascular smooth muscle cells
- single molecule
- fluorescent probe
- artificial intelligence
- sensitive detection
- quantum dots
- amino acid
- protein protein