The bone lining cells cover the bone surfaces and contact other bone cells, such as the osteocytes that reside inside the bones, through cell-to-cell contact.
Estrogen plays a crucial role in the regulation of bone mass. Low levels of estrogen is known to be a major cause of postmenopausal osteoporosis or bone weakness. Skeletal stability and pathological skeletal changes thus depend directly on the hormone's availability and its interaction with the bone cells.// Until now, however, the actual target cells responsible for mediating the effect of estrogen on bone had still been unknown. Researchers at Vetmeduni Vienna have now demonstrated that bone lining cells act as "gatekeepers" for the hormone. By binding to these cells, estrogen controls the expression of RANKL, an important factor in bone turnover and remodelling.
‘Estrogen, plays a crucial role in the regulation of bone mass. Skeletal stability and pathological skeletal changes thus depend directly on the hormone's availability and its interaction with the bone cells.’
Estrogen Uses a Certain Cell Type to Mediate its Effect on Bone DensityThe development of bone structure depends on a complex system of hormones and proteins. One important component is the signaling molecule RANKL. It influences the development of special cells, the so-called osteoclasts that are responsible for bone resorption. A lack of estrogen or the corresponding cell receptors where it can bind results in the overproduction of RANKL, which triggers a variety of pathological bone changes.
Several studies confirm estrogen's role in regulating RANKL production and thus in protecting skeletal integrity. "Which cells it must bind to in order to have this effect, however, had been a matter of debate," says study director Reinhold Erben from the Unit of Physiology, Pathophysiology and Experimental Endocrinology. "We were now able to confirm that estrogen's effect on bone occurs primarily through binding to the bone lining cells."
The bone lining cells cover the bone surfaces and contact other bone cells, such as the osteocytes that reside inside the bones, through cell-to-cell contact. They had been suspected of being involved in the regulation of bone resorption through the osteoclasts. The fact that the bone lining cells, as target cells for estrogen, play a role in bone maintenance confirms this suspicion.
Tissue Cells Surrounding the Bones Act as Mediator of the Hormonal Effect
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To identify the cells, the research team used a special method called laser capture microdissection to exactly separate individual cell types from the remaining tissue. They then determined the gene frequency using RNA analysis and were so able to confirm the bone lining cells as the primary target cells. "The bone lining cells also make sense as gatekeepers or mediators for the effect of the bound hormone because of their position on the bone and their connection to the other bone cells," says Erben.
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Source-Eurekalert