
miR‐181c‐5p mediates simulated microgravity‐induced impaired osteoblast proliferation by promoting cell cycle arrested in the G 2 phase
Author(s) -
Sun Zhongyang,
Li Ying,
Wang Han,
Cai Min,
Gao Shanshan,
Liu Jing,
Tong Liangcheng,
Hu Zebing,
Wang Yixuan,
Wang Ke,
Zhang Lijun,
Cao Xinsheng,
Zhang Shu,
Shi Fei,
Zhao Jianning
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of cellular and molecular medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.44
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1582-4934
pISSN - 1582-1838
DOI - 10.1111/jcmm.14220
Subject(s) - osteoblast , cell cycle , cell growth , microbiology and biotechnology , cell cycle checkpoint , cyclin , chemistry , cell , biology , biochemistry , in vitro
Impaired osteoblast proliferation plays fundamental roles in microgravity‐induced bone loss, and cell cycle imbalance may result in abnormal osteoblast proliferation. However, whether microgravity exerts an influence on the cell cycle in osteoblasts or what mechanisms may underlie such an effect remains to be fully elucidated. Herein, we confirmed that simulated microgravity inhibits osteoblast proliferation. Then, we investigated the effect of mechanical unloading on the osteoblast cell cycle and found that simulated microgravity arrested the osteoblast cell cycle in the G 2 phase. In addition, our data showed that cell cycle arrest in osteoblasts from simulated microgravity was mainly because of decreased cyclin B1 expression. Furthermore, miR‐181c‐5p directly inhibited cyclin B1 protein translation by binding to a target site in the 3′UTR. Lastly, we demonstrated that inhibition of miR‐181c‐5p partially counteracted cell cycle arrest and decreased the osteoblast proliferation induced by simulated microgravity. In conclusion, our study demonstrates that simulated microgravity inhibits cell proliferation and induces cell cycle arrest in the G 2 phase in primary mouse osteoblasts partially through the miR‐181c‐5p/cyclin B1 pathway. This work may provide a novel mechanism of microgravity‐induced detrimental effects on osteoblasts and offer a new avenue to further investigate bone loss induced by mechanical unloading.