Osteoclasts and Bone Resorption
Osteoclast
-Large cells, many nucleus -lineage with blood cell (macrophages) -precursors circulate blood/marrow -mature --> formed by fusion of precursors -resorb bone, sealed compartments, secrete acids to degrade bone (ruffled border) -undergo apoptosis after resorbing bone
Osteoclastogenesis
Bone marrow precursor --> release M-CSF --> preosteoclast preosteoclast--> release M-CSF, RANKL --> fused polykaryon, but if OPG then stay poc fused polykaryon --> RANKL --> active oc (OPG inhibit)
Osteoclast markers
F4/80- (macrophage marker) TRAP+ (tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase) CTR+ (calcitonin receptor) beta3+ (beta 3 integrin) CATK (Cathepsin K)
Mechanism of osteoclastic bone resorption
H+, HCO3-, Cl- gradient (influx of H+ and Cl- into sealed compartment) -alpha5beta3 protein -CATK -sealed compartment has low pH to resorb bone tissues -TGN (trans Golgi)
Vicious cell-cell interaction cycle in bone marrow
Osteoclasts stimulate factors to increase cancer proliferation Cancer cells stimulate factors to increase osteoclast proliferation Can slow bone resorption to slow cancer.. never fully stop it
How are mature osteoclasts formed? (what signals)
RANK receptors from osteoclast precursors activated by RANKL, *secreted by osteoblasts* *Osteoprotegerin* (OPG) in marrow, also help regulate osteoclast activation
Osteoprotegrin (OPG)
decoy receptor that prevents RANKL from binding RANK and inhibits osteoclast formation, function, and survival
RANKL
essential mediator of osteoclast formation, function, survival
Where does bone resorption occur?
inside the actin ring
Osteopetrotic mice
op/op mouse has defect in gene that produces M-CSF (macrophage colony stimulating factor) CANNOT STIMULATE OSTEOCLAST (no resorption)
If RANKL overwhelms OPG?
resorption can become excessive, lead to osteoporosis