Publication | Open Access
Bisphosphonate action. Alendronate localization in rat bone and effects on osteoclast ultrastructure.
1K
Citations
72
References
1991
Year
Tissue EngineeringRat BoneBone SurfaceOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryBisphosphonate ActionBone DiseaseBone RemodelingOsteoarthritisBone HomeostasisSilver GrainsBisphosphonate AlendronateHealth SciencesMechanobiologySkeletal BiologyBone DensityAlendronate LocalizationPharmacologyBone MetabolismOsteocalcinHydroxyapatitePhysiologyMedicine
Alendronate binds bone particles with a Kd of ~1 mM and a capacity of 100 nmol/mg at pH 7, with binding reduced by 50 % at pH 3.5. Alendronate localizes mainly to osteoclast surfaces, accumulates within bone over time, and at micromolar concentrations inhibits osteoclast resorption and membrane ruffling while inducing calcium leakiness, indicating that it binds resorption surfaces, is released during acidification, and halts resorption without killing osteoclasts.
Studies of the mode of action of the bisphosphonate alendronate showed that 1 d after the injection of 0.4 mg/kg [3H]alendronate to newborn rats, 72% of the osteoclastic surface, 2% of the bone forming, and 13% of all other surfaces were densely labeled. Silver grains were seen above the osteoclasts and no other cells. 6 d later the label was 600-1,000 microns away from the epiphyseal plate and buried inside the bone, indicating normal growth and matrix deposition on top of alendronate-containing bone. Osteoclasts from adult animals, infused with parathyroid hormone-related peptide (1-34) and treated with 0.4 mg/kg alendronate subcutaneously for 2 d, all lacked ruffled border but not clear zone. In vitro alendronate bound to bone particles with a Kd of approximately 1 mM and a capacity of 100 nmol/mg at pH 7. At pH 3.5 binding was reduced by 50%. Alendronate inhibited bone resorption by isolated chicken or rat osteoclasts when the amount on the bone surface was around 1.3 x 10(-3) fmol/microns 2, which would produce a concentration of 0.1-1 mM in the resorption space if 50% were released. At these concentrations membrane leakiness to calcium was observed. These findings suggest that alendronate binds to resorption surfaces, is locally released during acidification, the rise in concentration stops resorption and membrane ruffling, without destroying the osteoclasts.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1