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Zentrum für Molekulare Biologie Heidelberg, Ruprecht-Karls-University of Heidelberg, D-69115 Heidelberg, Germany; and the
Department of Anatomy, Bristol University, Bristol BS8 1TH, United Kingdom
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Key Words: endothelin 1 endothelin A receptor glucocorticoids bone osteoblasts
Bone growth and metabolism are dependent on vascular supply. The ingrowth of blood vessels in the epiphyseal growth zone and in fracture callus formation precedes bone formation (1). Restriction of bone perfusion impairs bone metabolism, which may be associated with a loss of bone mass (2). The most severe form of an impaired vascular supply of the bone compartment is bone infarction leading to the clinical diagnosis of osteonecrosis (3). Frequently, osteonecrosis occurs in patients after long-term treatment with pharmacological doses of glucocorticoids, but the mechanism whereby glucocorticoid treatment causes osteonecrosis is not understood (4). Several studies demonstrate that glucocorticoids directly affect osteoblastic cell functions. Thus, physiological concentrations of glucocorticoids have a stimulatory effect on type I collagen synthesis, whereas pharmacological concentrations of glucocorticoids decrease type I collagen synthesis by osteoblasts. Alkaline phosphatase activity (ALP)1 increases in short-term experiments but decreases in long-term cultures of rat calvariae in the presence of glucocorticoids. DNA content and cell replication are not affected in short-term incubation but are decreased after long-term glucocorticoid treatment (5). Glucocorticoids stimulate endothelin 1 (ET1) secretion from vascular smooth muscle cells (6) and elevate plasma ET1 levels (7), which may contribute to increased blood pressure (8) and possibly to impaired bone perfusion in glucocorticoid-treated patients (9) because ET1 is a potent vasoconstrictor (10). ET1 also stimulates human osteoblastic cell (HOC) proliferation and differentiated functions (11), suggesting that a change in the local or systemic ET1 concentration may also affect bone metabolism. Therefore, both glucocorticoids and ET1 exert direct effects on osteoblastic cell metabolism. It is unclear how glucocorticoids and ET1 interact on osteoblastic cell metabolism, and how the direct effects of glucocorticoids and ET1 on bone cell metabolism are related to the frequent clinical observation of an osteonecrotic destruction, e.g., of the femoral head, in glucocorticoid-treated patients. To better understand the perturbation of human bone cell metabolism in glucocorticoid-treated patients, the interaction of glucocorticoids and ET1 on human bone cell metabolism in vitro was investigated. Glucocorticoids elevate circulating ET1 serum levels in vivo and enhance the mitogenic effect of ET1 on HOC in vitro by upregulating the expression of the osteoblastic endothelin A receptor (ETRA) in vitro and in vivo.
Human Femoral Head Biopsies.
Cloning and Sequence Analysis of 5'-flanking Region.
Transient Transfection and Reporter Gene Assays.
RNA Isolation and Northern Blot Analysis.
Frozen femoral head biopsies were also used for RNA isolation. These frozen biopsies were ground under liquid nitrogen, and the resulting bone powder was suspended in 4 M guanidinium thiocyanate solution. This suspension was centrifuged at low speed twice to separate insoluble fractions, and the supernatant was loaded onto a CsCl gradient.
Total RNA was quantitated by absorption at 260 nm, and equal RNA samples were denatured with 2.2 M formaldehyde, 50% formamide, 5 µg/ml ethidium bromide, and loading dye in 1x MOPS buffer (40 mM morpholinolpropanesulfonic acid, pH 7.0, 10 mM sodium acetate, and 0.5 mM EDTA) at 65°C for 15 min. 15 µg total RNA was fractionated on a 1.0% formaldehyde-MOPS agarose gel. RNA was transferred overnight to Hybond N (Nycomed Amersham plc, Little Chalfont, Buckinghamshire, UK) by capillary action with 20x SSC (1x = 0.15 M sodium chloride and 0.015 M sodium citrate, pH 7.0) and immobilized by heating for 2 h at 80°C.
Complementary DNA probes for 28S RNA (Ambion Inc., Austin, TX), ETRA (provided by Dr. Haendler, Schering AG, Berlin, Germany), and ET1 (American Type Culture Collection) were labeled with [32P]dCTP by the random priming method using the Prime-a-gene labeling kit (Promega Corp.). The RNA filters were prehybridized in 50% formamide, 5x SSPE (1x = 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM NaH2PO4, 1 mM EDTA, pH 7.4), 5x Denhardt's (1x = 0.2% of Ficoll, BSA, and polyvinyl pyrrolidone), 100 µg/ml denatured herring sperm DNA, and 0.1% SDS for 3 h at 42°C. Hybridizations were performed for 24 h at 42°C in the prehybridization solution containing 5 x 106 cpm/ml of the radiolabeled denatured cDNA probe. Filters were washed at 42°C four times for 5 min with 2x SSC/0.1% SDS and twice for 10 min with 0.2x SSC/0.1% SDS before exposure to Agfa curix HT 1.000G films at –80°C for 24 h (28S) and 4 d (ETRA), respectively. The autoradiographs were quantitated using a densitometer (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA) and Molecular Analyst software. The mRNA signals were normalized against 28S RNA signal and expressed as relative units.
Endothelin Enzyme Immunoassay.
Measurement of Cell Proliferation.
125I-ET1 Binding Analysis.
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Materials and Methods
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
HOC Culture.
Human bone biopsies were obtained from adult healthy patients (35–75 yr old) undergoing selective orthopedic surgery of the femur (approval for this study was given by the ethics commission of the University of Heidelberg). HOC were obtained from femur biopsies as described previously (12). Freshly removed bone biopsies were placed in DME (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) supplemented with 10% calf serum (CS) from Hyclone (Logan, UT), 10 U/ml penicillin-G, and 10 µg/ml streptomycin (PS; GIBCO BRL). The biopsies were minced into small pieces (0.5 cm3), rinsed, and cleaned thoroughly of contaminating connective, erythropoietic, and fat tissue. The resulting bone explants were incubated in culture medium at 37°C in a humidified atmosphere with 5% CO2 until human bone cells had attached to the culture dishes (Costar Corp., Cambridge, MA). Cells were removed from dishes with 0.05% trypsin solution (GIBCO BRL) and plated in culture medium as stated above. Cells of the first and second passage were used for the experiments. HOC were identified as osteoblastic cell populations on the basis of 1,25(OH)2D3-stimulated ALP, osteocalcin secretion, type I procollagen peptide secretion, and in vitro mineralization as described previously (13). Dexamethasone, ET1, prednisolone, actinomycin D, and cycloheximide were obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO); deflazacort was a gift from Dr. Görlich (Marion Merrell Dow, Rüsselsheim, Germany); and RU486 was provided by Roussel Uclaf (Paris, France).
Femoral head biopsies for total RNA extractions were obtained from 40–65-yr-old patients with no history of cardiovascular diseases or metabolic disorders (e.g., diabetes mellitus) who underwent surgery for total hip replacement. Three groups of patients with three different diagnoses were examined: (a) coxarthrosis, (b) glucocorticoid-induced osteonecrosis, and (c) traumatically induced osteonecrosis. After removal at surgery, intact femoral heads were frozen immediately in liquid nitrogen and maintained in –80°C until use.
Cloning of the 5'-flanking region of the human ETRA gene was performed with the human Genome Walker Kit (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA). A gene-specific primer and an adaptor-specific primer were used for amplification of a genomic DNA fragment upstream from the known ETRA gene sequence, followed by reamplification using a second set of nested primers (one gene-specific and one adaptor-specific primer). A 3.1-kb amplification product was cloned in a PCR cloning vector (pT-Adv vector; Clontech) and automatically sequenced. After computer-aided restriction enzyme mapping, a SacI-XhoI fragment containing the 5'-flanking region of the human ETRA gene from –3050 to +48 (plus one transcription start site) was subcloned into the pGL3 Basic luciferase reporter gene plasmid (Promega Corp., Madison, WI). The 3.1-kb ETRA promoter region was analyzed with regard to the presence of steroid hormone response elements by performing a computer-aided search using the HUSAR Factor search utility (German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany).
HOC were seeded with 104 cells per well in six-well plates and grown in DME supplemented with 10% CS and 1% PS to 60–75% confluence. Immediately before transfection, the cultures were washed twice in serum and phenol red–free DME. Transfections were performed with Lipofectin transfection reagent (GIBCO BRL). Plasmids used for transfection were purified with CsCl gradient centrifugation. Before transfection, calculated for each well of a six-well plate, 10 µl Lipofection reagent was incubated for 10 min at room temperature with 1.5 µg of reporter gene construct, which contains the human ETRA 5'-flanking fragment (–3050 to +48) fused to luciferase gene, 0.5 µg glucocorticoid receptor expression plasmid when cotransfection experiments were performed (American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, MD), and 1.0 µg β-galactosidase expression plasmid (pSV-βgal; Promega Corp.). Lipofectin/plasmid solution was added to washed cells in serum and phenol red DME (end vol 1 ml/well) for 4 h at 37°C. After plasmid incubation, medium was changed to DME supplemented with 5% CS and 1% PS for 44 h at 37°C. To determine glucocorticoid-dependent expression of luciferase reporter gene, cells were incubated for a further 24 h in the absence or presence of 100 nM dexamethasone in serum and phenol red–free DME. Cells were harvested in 250 µl/well 1x reporter lysis buffer (Promega Corp.) and centrifuged to pellet the debris, and the luciferase activity in the supernatant was quantitated in a luminometer (model LB9507; EG&G Berthold, Wildbad, Germany) using a Luciferase Assay System (Promega Corp.). To correct for variations in transfection efficiencies, luciferase activities were normalized on the basis of β-galactosidase activity assayed by the Galacto Light Plus System (Tropix, Inc., Bedford, MA) following the instructions of the manufacturer.
48 h before RNA extraction, HOC were cultured in serum and phenol red–free DME for 24 h, after which the medium was replaced by serum and phenol red–free DME with or without additional glucocorticoids (as detailed below). After 24 h continuous treatment with glucocorticoids, total RNA was isolated for Northern blot analyses. Culture dishes were rinsed in ice-cold PBS, and total RNA was extracted by the guanidinium thiocyanate method (14) with subsequent CsCl gradient centrifugation for 16 h.
ET1 concentrations in culture supernatants and in human plasma were measured by an ELISA (Biomedica, Vienna, Austria). 200 µl of undiluted supernatant from control and dexamethasone-treated cultures was assayed in five replicates and corrected for protein contents. For detection of plasma ET1, 200 µl of human EDTA-plasma was assayed in three replicates. ET1, if present in the sample, binds to the precoated polyclonal capture rabbit antiendothelin antibody and forms a sandwich with antiendothelin mAbs. After a washing step, horseradish peroxidase–conjugated anti–mouse IgG antibody detects the presence of detection mAb. Tetramethylbenzidine is added as substrate, and ET1 is quantitated by an enzyme-catalyzed color change on an ELISA reader at 450 nm. The measuring range of the assay is 0.05–15.6 fmol/ml. The cross-reaction with endothelin 2, endothelin 3, and big endothelin was 100, 5, and 1%, respectively.
HOC were plated for 24 h in DME, 10% CS, 1% PS in 48-well plates with 2 x 104 cells/ well. After 24 h preincubation with vehicle and 10 nM dexamethasone in DME supplemented with 1% CS and 1% PS, medium was changed and cells were treated for an additional 24 h in DME containing 1% CS/1% PS in the presence of increasing concentrations of ET1 (1, 10, 100, and 1,000 pg/ml). Cells were trypsinized, and each well was counted separately using a hemacytometer. Mean values from six wells of two separate experiments were calculated and expressed as percentage of control ± SD. Cultures pretreated with vehicle and 10 nM dexamethasone, respectively, without subsequent addition of ET1 were used as control values. The Student's t test was applied, and statistical significance was accepted at P < 0.05.
HOC were plated in culture dishes (78 cm2) with DME containing 10% CS and 1% PS. After growing to 90% confluence, cultures were maintained for 24 h in serum-free, phenol red–free DME before treatment with 100 nM dexamethasone or vehicle control for 24 h. Cells were rinsed with ice-cold PBS containing 1.25 mg/ml BSA and incubated for 2 h at 4°C in serum-free, phenol red–free DME containing 1.25 mg/ml BSA with increasing concentrations of 125I-ET1 (5–1,000 pM, specific activity 2,200 Ci/mmol; DuPont-NEN, Dreieich, Germany). Nonspecific 125I-ET1 binding was determined in the presence of 1 µM unlabeled ET1 for all concentrations. At the end of the 2-h incubation period, the cultures were rinsed in ice-cold PBS/BSA and solubilized in 0.5 M NaOH before counting the adherent activity with a gamma counter. Measurements were obtained in six replicates and evaluated by Scatchard analysis (15).
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Results
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Effect of Dexamethasone on ET1-induced HOC Proliferation.
ET1 stimulates HOC proliferation in a dose- and time- dependent fashion (11). To determine the effect of dexamethasone on ET1-induced HOC proliferation, cells were counted in the absence and presence of dexamethasone. The cultures were pretreated with vehicle and 10 nM dexamethasone, respectively, in DME supplemented with 1% CS/1% PS. After 24 h incubation, medium was changed to DME containing 1% CS/1% PS, and HOC were incubated for 24 h in the presence of 1, 10, 100, and 1,000 pg/ml ET1. ET1 stimulated HOC proliferation in a dose-dependent manner, and pretreatment with 10 nM dexamethasone enhanced the mitogenic effect of ET1 (Fig. 1). This suggests a link between the systemically acting steroid hormones and the mechanism of action of the paracrine regulator of bone cell metabolism, ET1.
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Effects of Prednisolone on ET1 Plasma Concentrations In Vivo.
Glucocorticoids increase ET1 plasma concentrations in a rat model (7). To determine whether glucocorticoid treatment also increases ET1 in humans, plasma ET1 concentrations were measured in 17 patients with back pain (arising from spondylosis) before and 5 d after treatment with intravenous prednisolone (50 mg prednisolone on day 1, 25 mg on days 2 and 3, and 10 mg on days 4 and 5). Patients also received intravenous diclofenac (75 mg), tetrazepam (12.5 mg), and tramadol (50 mg) and had no other acute or chronic disease. It was found that prednisolone treatment increased ET1 plasma levels by 50% (Fig. 2 A), whereas the control group of patients similarly infused but not receiving prednisolone showed no significant change in plasma ET1 levels after 5 d treatment (Fig. 2 B).
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Culture of HOC in the presence of 1 pM, 100 pM, 10 nM, and 1 µM dexamethasone for 24 h resulted in an increase of ETRA mRNA transcripts, with greatest response at 1 µM dexamethasone (4.7-fold over control, as determined by densitometry; Fig. 3 A). The effect was observed as early as 12 h after addition of 10 nM dexamethasone (Fig. 3 B) and continued to increase at least until 48 h. Therefore, dexamethasone upregulates ETRA mRNA levels in a dose- and time-dependent fashion.
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25,300 to 62,800, i.e., 2.4-fold over control (Fig. 6). Scatchard transformation of the binding data was performed to calculate the KD for ET1 binding. There was no significant change in the binding affinity of ET1 to the osteoblastic ETRA with and without dexamethasone treatment (134 vs. 177 pM).
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To demonstrate promoter activity of the sequenced 5'-flanking region of the human ETRA gene, the DNA fragment from –3050 to +48 was cloned upstream of a luciferase reporter gene in the pGL3 Basic vector without a promoter (Fig. 11 A). The chimeric construct was cotransfected with a glucocorticoid receptor expression plasmid into primary HOC and treated with 100 nM dexamethasone and control medium for 24 h to determine the effect of a glucocorticoid treatment on the reporter gene activity (Fig. 11 B). Significant luciferase activity was detected in cells transfected with the ETRA promoter/reporter gene construct compared with cells transfected only with the promoter-deficient vector pGL3 Basic (data not shown). A treatment with 100 nM dexamethasone for 24 h led to an induction of the luciferase reporter gene activity of
2.6-fold over untreated osteoblastic control cultures. Experiments without cotransfection of glucocorticoid receptor expression plasmid showed no significant difference in the luciferase reporter gene activity between control and dexamethasone-treated cultures (data not shown).
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This study provides evidence that long-term exposure to pharmacological doses of systemically circulating glucocorticoid hormones may interfere with paracrine signaling between bone tissue and the vascular system by affecting the osteoblastic ETRA gene expression and increasing ET1 plasma concentrations. ET1 is a paracrine factor of the vascular system secreted by vascular smooth muscle and endothelial cells and was initially identified as a potent vasoconstrictor (28, 10). ET1 does also exert biological activity on various cell types (29), including osteoblastic cells (30). ET1 stimulates type I collagen secretion and ALP expression in primary HOC and exerts a potent mitogenic action on human bone cells (11). These effects on osteoblastic cells are mediated by specific ETRAs, which are constitutively expressed in HOC. The action of ET1 on differentiated osteoblastic functions (e.g., type I collagen synthesis and ALP expression) and the mitogenic effect of ET1 on osteoblastic cells suggest a regulatory role of ET1 in human bone formation and bone growth.
To investigate how glucocorticoids may interact with the regulatory effect of ET1 on human bone cell metabolism, HOC were pretreated with glucocorticoids and the mitogenic effect of a subsequent ET1 treatment was determined. A glucocorticoid treatment enhanced the mitogenic action of ET1. There are several possibilities for how glucocorticoids may affect ET1-mediated actions.
(a) Glucocorticoids may induce the secretion of other peptides, exerting a proliferative effect on bone cells, which has been shown for other steroid hormones, e.g., progesterone, which increases insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-II expression in bone cells (31). Growth factor release may enhance ET1-induced cell proliferation in a concerted action as observed in rat kidney fibroblasts for transforming growth factor (TGF)-
and ET1 (32). However, there are also reports demonstrating a downregulation of the osteoblastic secretion of bone cell mitogens by glucocorticoids (33). A second mechanism by which glucocorticoids may affect ET1-induced cell proliferation is a glucocorticoid- induced increase in ET1 secretion, leading to higher ET1 concentrations in the culture medium which may increase the cell proliferation of HOC in a dose-dependent manner. However, there was no ET1 measurable in HOC cultures, and ET1 expression was not stimulated by glucocorticoid treatment in vitro. Because the culture medium was changed after glucocorticoid pretreatment, it appears unlikely that glucocorticoid-stimulated growth factor or ET1 release by osteoblastic cells contributes to the observed enhancement of ET1 action by glucocorticoids in vitro. However, in vivo glucocorticoid treatment elevated plasma ET1 concentrations significantly. This observation is consistent with a stimulatory action of glucocorticoids on ET1 production by vascular cells, which was demonstrated in a rat model (6). The significant interpatient variability in ET1 plasma level changes after glucocorticoid treatment (Fig. 2 A) is reminiscent of the variability of changes in lymphocyte response, insulin resistance, and bone density among glucocorticoid-treated patients (34–36).
(b) Glucocorticoids may also stimulate ET1-induced human bone cell proliferation by affecting postreceptor mechanisms. An interaction between glucocorticoids and growth factors on the postreceptor level was demonstrated recently in dexamethasone-treated fibroblastic cultures where the activation of the glucocorticoid receptor interferes with postreceptor processes of the IGF-I receptor (37), impairing IGF-I–mediated effects. To our knowledge, there are no reports demonstrating glucocorticoid-induced enhancement of growth factor actions by affecting postreceptor mechanisms.
(c) Finally, glucocorticoid treatment may enhance osteoblastic ETRA expression, because other steroid hormones (1,25(OH)2D3) have also been shown to modulate ETRA mRNA expression in HOC (11). This possibility was tested in a primary HOC system. The results demonstrate that ETRA mRNA expression is indeed upregulated by dexamethasone in a dose- and time-dependent fashion. Experiments with actinomycin D reveal that increased ETRA mRNA levels are not due to increased transcript stability. The slow time course of ETRA mRNA induction by glucocorticoids may be due to an unphysiologically low basal ETRA mRNA level in vitro after a 48-h period of serum deprivation, a short half-life of ETRA mRNA, or to the recruitment of transcription factors which are constitutively present at very low basal concentrations (after a 48-h culture period in the absence of serum) and are required for ETRA gene transcription.
Elevated ETRA mRNA expression by glucocorticoids translates into a greater number of ET1 binding sites in HOC, whereas no change in the binding affinity for ET1 after glucocorticoid treatment was found. The observation that the glucocorticoid-increased ETRA mRNA expression level correlates positively to the affinity of the used glucocorticoid to the glucocorticoid receptor supports the view that the glucocorticoid-stimulated ETRA upregulation is a receptor-mediated phenomenon that depends on the ligand-activated glucocorticoid receptor protein. In vivo experiments examining osteonecrotic femoral head biopsies from glucocorticoid-treated patients demonstrate higher ETRA mRNA levels compared with biopsies from patients with traumatically induced osteonecrosis of the femoral head and coxarthrosis. However, this observation of an increased ETRA mRNA level in total RNA extracts from femoral head biopsies of glucocorticoid-treated patients may in part also be a glucocorticoid effect on nonosteoblastic cells, which are always present in bone tisssue (e.g., endothelial or smooth muscle cells).
RU486, a nonspecific steroid hormone antagonist, blocked the effect of dexamethasone on ETRA mRNA expression in HOC, suggesting a direct glucocorticoid receptor–mediated effect of the used compounds on ETRA mRNA expression. Combination experiments with RU486 demonstrate that maximal upregulation of osteoblastic ETRA mRNA levels by glucocorticoids depends on the continuous presence of the glucocorticoid. An increase of ETRA mRNA in HOC by glucocorticoids does not require de novo protein synthesis, indicating that the mediation of the effect of glucocorticoids on ETRA mRNA expression does not require de novo synthesis of transcription factors (e.g., AP-1 [38]). Moreover, superinduction of ETRA mRNA levels in the presence of dexamethasone and cycloheximide suggests that cycloheximide stabilizes ETRA mRNA transcripts by inhibiting the synthesis of a protein responsible for mRNA degradation, thereby leading to an accumulation of ETRA mRNA. The necessity for a continuous presence of the glucocorticoid to observe the upregulation of the ETRA mRNA is consistent with a mechanism by which ETRA expression is upregulated by the presence of ligand-activated glucocorticoid receptors serving as transcription factors after translocation into the HOC nucleus. To test this hypothesis, a 3.1-kb fragment of the 5'-flanking region of the human ETRA gene was cloned and automatically sequenced. Computer-aided sequence analysis revealed the presence of four putative GRE (–2795, –2603, –1686, and –823); two of them showed high conservation to the GRE consensus sequence (39). Transient transfections of HOC cultures with a chimeric construct of the 5'-flanking region of the ETRA gene fused to luciferase reporter gene and a glucocorticoid receptor expression plasmid showed a promoter-dependent expression of the reporter gene and regulation by dexamethasone. With a 2.6-fold induction of luciferase activity by dexamethasone treatment, the results of the transfection experiments correspond to the observed induction of ETRA by dexamethasone on the mRNA and protein level. However, the dexamethasone-mediated induction of luciferase activity required cotransfection with the glucocorticoid receptor expression plasmid, demonstrating that the basal expression level of glucocorticoid receptor in transfection experiments without cotransfection of glucocorticoid receptor expression plasmid is not sufficient to mediate induction of reporter gene activity after dexamethasone treatment. A low level of endogenous glucocorticoid receptor gene expression may be due to the experimental design: before dexamethasone treatment, cells were incubated in the presence of serum, which could lead to downregulation of glucocorticoid receptor expression by serum-derived steroid compounds (40).
Some limitations of the presented work also arise from experimental design and the experimental model (HOC) used. Glucocorticoid treatment of HOC was not continued for more than 48 h; therefore, it is not clear when the maximum ETRA mRNA level can be observed after glucocorticoid treatment of primary HOC. Furthermore, binding affinity for ET1 in HOC was reduced fivefold, an effect which apparently conflicts with a higher previous estimate (11) of the ET1 binding affinity in HOC (KD of 35 pM). This difference is likely to be due to the heterogeneous nature of primary HOC cultures, which are contaminated to various degrees (20–50%) by nonbone cells such as fibroblastic and vascular cells (11). Thus, the secretion of an unlabeled competing ligand by an unusually high percentage of contaminating nonbone cells may explain the higher apparent KD.
These data provide evidence that glucocorticoid- induced upregulation of circulating ET1 plasma levels and osteoblastic ETRA gene expression stimulate the osteoblastic cell metabolism. However, ET1-induced potent vasoconstriction may increase blood pressure (8) and could impair bone perfusion (9) in metabolically activated skeletal sites, which may contribute to the pathogenesis of glucocorticoid-induced osteonecrosis.
| Acknowledgments |
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Submitted: 22 January 1998
Revised: 24 August 1998
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