Researchers from the UCLA School of Dentistry have identified the role a critical enzyme plays in skeletal aging and bone loss, putting them one step closer to understanding the complex biological mechanisms that lead to osteoporosis, the bone disease that afflicts some 200 million people worldwide.
The findings from their study in mice, published online today in the journal Cell Stem Cell, could hold an important key to developing more effective treatments for osteoporosis and improving the lives of an aging population, they say.
Cells in the bone marrow known as mesenchymal stem cells serve as the building blocks of the body's skeletal tissues, but whether these stem cells ultimately develop into bone or fat tissues is controlled in part by what are known as epigenetic factors — molecules that regulate genes, silencing some and activating others.
The UCLA researchers, led by distinguished professor Dr. Cun-Yu Wang, chair of oral biology at the dentistry school, demonstrated that when the epigenetic factor KDM4B is absent from mesenchymal stem cells, these cells are far more likely to differentiate into fat cells than bone cells, resulting in an unhealthy imbalance that exacerbates skeletal aging and leads to brittle bones and fractures over time.
"We know that bone loss comes with age, but the mechanisms behind extreme cases such as osteoporosis have, up until recently, been very vague," said Dr. Wang, the study's corresponding author and the Dr. No-Hee Park Professor of Dentistry at UCLA. "In this study, we built on more than seven years of research managed by my postdoctoral scholar and lead author Dr. Peng Deng in the hope that we can eventually prevent skeletal aging and osteoporosis."
While scientists have long understood the cellular pathway involved in bone tissue formation, the role of epigenetic factors has been murkier. Previous research by Wang, Deng and others had identified that the enzyme KDM4B plays an important epigenetic role in bone formation, but they were unsure of how its absence might affect the processes of bone formation and bone loss.
To test this, the research team created a mouse model in which KDM4B was absent or removed in several different scenarios. They found that the removal of the enzyme pushed mesenchymal stem cells to create more fat instead of bone tissue, leading to bone loss over time, which mimics skeletal aging.
In one important scenario, the scientists examined stem cell senescence, or deterioration and exhaustion — the natural process by which mesenchymal stem cells stop rejuvenating or creating more of themselves over time. The team unexpectedly found that senescence, which leads to natural skeletal aging, was characterized by a loss of KDM4B.
Peng Deng/UCLA School of Dentistry
A loss of the epigenic factor KDM4B promotes the accumulation fat cells in the bone marrow (pictured here) of aging mice, researchers found.
In addition to age, other environmental factors are thought to reduce bone quality and exacerbate bone loss, including a high-fat diet. The team demonstrated that a loss of KDM4B significantly promoted bone loss and the accumulation of marrow fat in mice placed on a high-fat diet.
Finally, the team showed that parathyroid hormone, an anabolic drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of aging-related bone loss, helps to maintain the pool of mesenchymal stem cells in aging mice in a KDM4B-dependent manner.
The results not only confirm the critical role KDM4B plays in mesenchymal stem cell fate decision, skeletal aging and osteoporosis, but they show that the loss of KDM4B exacerbates bone loss under a number of conditions and, surprisingly, that KDM4B controls the ability of mesenchymal stem cells to self-renew. This study is the first in vivo research to demonstrate that the loss of an epigenetic factor promotes adult stem cell deterioration and exhaustion in skeletal aging.
The findings, the researchers say, hold promise for the eventual development of strategies to reverse bone-fat imbalance, as well as for new prevention and treatment methods that address skeletal aging and osteoporosis by rejuvenating adult stem cells.
"The work of Dr. Wang, his lab members and collaborators provides new molecular insight into the changes associated with skeletal aging," said Dr. Paul Krebsbach, dean of the UCLA School of Dentistry. "These findings are an important step towards what may lead to more effective treatment for the millions of people who suffer from bone loss and osteoporosis."
The work was supported by grants from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (part of the National Institutes of Health), the UCLA Clinical and Translational Science Institute and the Hsien Family Foundation charitable funds.
Dr. Wang is also a member of the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering and Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA.
Additional authors include Dr. Peng Deng, Quan Yuan, Yingduan Cheng, Jiong Li, Zhenqing Liu, Yan Liu, Mari Ekimyan Salvo and Ye Li, all of the Laboratory of Molecular Signaling at the UCLA School of Dentistry; Trent Su of the UCLA Department of Biological Chemistry; Jing Wang, Weiguang Wang, Guoping Fan and Karen Lyons of the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA; and Dr. Bo Yu of the division of constitutive and regenerative science at the UCLA School of Dentistry.