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Osteocytic expression of mRNA for c-fos and IGF-I: an immediate early gene response to an osteogenic stimulus
137
Citations
22
References
1996
Year
SclerostinOsteogenesisIndomethacin SensitivityOrthopaedic SurgeryCellular PhysiologyOsteoporosisBone Morphogenic ProteinGrowth FactorOsteoarthritisMechanobiologyOsteocytic ExpressionGene ExpressionCell BiologyBone MetabolismOsteocalcinMechanical StimulationDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesOsteogenic StimulusMedicine
We analyzed the expression, during the osteogenic response of bone to mechanical stimulation, of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), a growth factor implicated in bone formation, and c-fos, a protooncogene in which disordered regulation specifically affects bone. Both genes were strongly expressed in osteocytes of mechanically stimulated but not control bones within 30 min of the osteogenic stimulus. IGF-I mRNA expression increased up to 6 h, was restricted to osteocytes, and was strongly suppressed by indomethacin. Although early IGF-I mRNA expression was resistant to cycloheximide, there was a degree of suppression after 6 h, raising the possibility that IGF-I expression might be prolonged by autocrine mechanisms. c-fos mRNA was increased both in osteocytes and on bone surfaces. At both sites, c-fos expression was transient, prolonged by cycloheximide, and was strongly stimulated even in the presence of indomethacin. Thus osteocytes respond to mechanical stimulation with immediate prolonged expression of IGF-I and immediate transient expression of c-fos, implicating osteocytes in the osteogenic response to mechanical stimulation. Moreover, the different spatial distribution and indomethacin sensitivity of c-fos and IGF-I gene expression suggest that at least two signaling pathways are activated in osteocytes during this process.
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