Abstract
This study examined the role of the Gαq signal constituted by Gαq and Gα11 (encoded by Gnαq and Gnα11, respectively), a major intracellular pathway of parathyroid hormone (PTH), in the PTH osteoanabolic action by the gain- and loss-of-function analyses. Transgenic mice with osteoblast-specific overexpression of the constitutively active Gnαq gene under the control of 2.3-kb type I collagen α1 chain (Col1a1) promoter exhibited osteopenia with decreased bone formation parameters and did not respond to the daily PTH treatment. We then established osteoblast-specific Gnαq and Gnα11 double-knock-out (cDKO) mice by crossing the 2.3-kb Col1a1 promoter-Cre recombinase transgenic mice and those with Gnαq gene flanked with loxP and global ablation of Gnα11 (Col1a1-Cre +/-;Gnaqfl/fl ;Gna11-/-) and found that the cDKO and single knock-out littermates of Gnα q or Gnα11 exhibited normal bone volume and turnover under physiological conditions. With a daily injection of PTH, however, the cDKO mice, but not the single knock-out mice, showed higher bone volume and turnover than the wild-type littermates. Cultures of primary osteoblasts derived from cDKO and wild-type littermates confirmed enhancement of the PTH osteoanabolic action by the Gαq signal deficiency in a cell-autonomous mechanism, in association with the membrane translocation of protein kinase Cδ. This enhancement was reproduced by overexpression of regulator of G protein signaling-2, a Gαq signal inhibitor, in osteoblastic MC3T3-E1 cells. Hence, the Gαq signal plays an inhibitory role in the PTH osteoanabolic action, suggesting that its suppression may lead to a novel treatment in combination with PTH against osteoporosis. © 2011 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Ogata, N., Shinoda, Y., Wettschureck, N., Offermanns, S., Takeda, S., Nakamura, K., … Kawaguchi, H. (2011). Gαq signal in osteoblasts is inhibitory to the osteoanabolic action of parathyroid hormone. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 286(15), 13733–13740. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.200196
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