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Parathyroid hormone regulates osteoblast differentiation positively or negatively depending on the differentiation stages
Author(s) -
Isogai Yukihiro,
Akatsu Takuhiko,
Ishizuya Toshinori,
Yamaguchi Akira,
Hori Masayuki,
Takahashi Naoyuki,
Suda Tatsuo
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
journal of bone and mineral research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.882
H-Index - 241
eISSN - 1523-4681
pISSN - 0884-0431
DOI - 10.1002/jbmr.5650111003
Subject(s) - parathyroid hormone , medicine , endocrinology , forskolin , osteoblast , alkaline phosphatase , osteocalcin , cell culture , chemistry , calvaria , cellular differentiation , cyclic adenosine monophosphate , hydroxyproline , stimulation , biology , in vitro , calcium , enzyme , biochemistry , receptor , genetics , gene
The effects of parathyroid hormone (1‐34) (PTH (1‐34)) on osteoblast differentiation were investigated using primary osteoblast‐like cells isolated from newborn mouse calvaria. The osteoblast‐like cells cultured at low cell densities, in which the cells remained in a subconfluent state at the end of culture, were exposed for 7 days to PTH. This stimulated alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity in a dose‐dependent manner. In contrast, PTH dosedependently inhibited both ALP activity and osteocalcin production in cells inoculated at high cell densities, in which they had reached a confluent state before the end of culture. The changes of ALP activity by PTH were accompanied with the expression of ALP messenger RNA. PTH induced no changes of the hydroxyproline content in the cell layer when the cells were exposed to the hormone at a subconfluent state, but reduced the content at a postconfluent state. The stimulation of ALP activity by PTH at a preconfluent state was retained even after the removal of PTH from the culture media. The opposite effect of PTH, observed between the preconfluent and the postconfluent state, was reproduced by adding dibutyryl cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) or forskolin, but not by adding phorbol myristate acetate. In a colony‐forming unit fibroblastic (CFU‐F) assay, using bone marrow cells isolated from tibiae of 10‐week‐old mice, PTH induced no changes in the total number of CFU‐Fs, but increased the proportion of ALP‐positive colonies. These results indicate that PTH exerts opposite effects on the phenotypic expression of osteoblasts, depending on their differentiation stages of osteoblasts. PTH may preferentially stimulate osteoblast differentiation in immature osteoblasts but inhibit it in more mature cells.