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Research

SCLEROSTIN ANTAGONISES ANABOLIC RESPONSE TO MECHANICAL LOADING IN BOVINE BONE EX VIVO

8th Combined Meeting Of Orthopaedic Research Societies (CORS)



Abstract

Introduction

Sclerostin has been implicated in mechanotransduction in bone and recent data show a lack of response to loading in the sclerostin transgenic mouse. Sclerostin, the protein product of the SOST gene, is an attractive therapeutic target for low bone mass conditions, including osteoporosis. It is expressed exclusively by mature osteocytes in bone and we have shown that sclerostin targets pre-osteocytes/osteocytes to regulate bone mineralization and osteoclast activity, as well as inducing catabolic gene expression in osteocytes themselves and promoting osteocyte-mediated bone loss (osteocytic osteolysis). The aim of this study was to examine the direct effects of sclerostin on anabolic responses to loading in bone ex vivo.

Methods

10 × 5mm bovine sternum trabecular bone cores were perfused with osteogenic media at 37°C for up to 3 weeks in individual bone culture chambers. The cores were divided into 3 groups; a) mechanically loaded (300 cycles, 4000 μstrain, 1 Hz/day), b) identical loading regime with continuous perfusion of 50 ng/ml recombinant human sclerostin and c) unloaded controls. Loading was accomplished using a second-generation Zetos™ bone loading system. Daily measurements of bone stiffness (Young's modulus), media pH and ionic calcium concentrations were made. Histomorphometric assessment, including fluorochrome labelling analysis, was made of resin-embedded, non-decalcified samples at the end of the experiment. Gene expression in the bovine bone was examined by real-time RT-PCR.

Results

Bovine bone cores showed a steady increase in Young's modulus with daily application of mechanical loading. This increase in stiffness was blocked by the co-addition of sclerostin. Sclerostin also induced bone acidification and a net release of bone calcium, indicated by the decrease in media pH and the relative increase in ionic calcium concentrations in the presence of sclerostin. Sclerostin also completely abrogated loading-induced calcium/calcein uptake. Sclerostin induced an increase in the expression of the bone resorption genes, tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), carbonic anhydrase and cathepsin K and induced the release of β-CTX. Histological examination revealed a significant increase in the size of the osteocyte lacunae in sclerostin-treated bone cores, suggesting a role for osteocytic osteolysis in this effect.

Discussion/Conclusion

The observation that sclerostin abrogated the loading-induced increase in bone stiffness constitutes direct evidence for a negative effect of sclerostin on the anabolic response to mechanical loading. Our findings may be explained in part by the observation that sclerostin negatively controls mineralization by late osteoblasts and pre-osteocytes (1). It is also possible that osteocytes themselves are capable of releasing bone mineral in response to sclerostin. This study demonstrates that sclerostin directly antagonises the anabolic effects of mechanical loading in the absence of external (circulating, neural, hormonal) influences. The mechanisms, by which sclerostin exerts these effects, warrant further study.