Loss of Cbl-PI3K interaction in mice prevents significant bone loss following ovariectomy.
Publication/Presentation Date
10-1-2014
Abstract
Cbl and Cbl-b are E3 ubiquitin ligases and adaptor proteins, which perform regulatory roles in bone remodeling. Cbl-/- mice have delayed bone development due to decreased osteoclast migration. Cbl-b-/- mice are osteopenic due to increased bone resorbing activity of osteoclasts. Unique to Cbl, but not present in Cbl-b, is tyrosine 737 in the YEAM motif, which upon phosphorylation provides a binding site for the regulatory p85 subunit of PI3K. Substitution of tyrosine 737 with phenylalanine (Y737F, CblYF/YF mice) prevents Y737 phosphorylation and abrogates the Cbl-PI3K interaction. We have previously reported that CblYF/YF mice had increased bone volume due to defective bone resorption and increased bone formation. Here we show that the lumbar vertebra from CblYF/YF mice did not have significant bone loss following ovariectomy. Our data also suggests that abrogation of Cbl-PI3K interaction in mice results in the loss of coupling between bone resorption and formation, since ovariectomized CblYF/YF mice did not show significant changes in serum levels of c-terminal telopeptide (CTX), whereas the serum levels of pro-collagen type-1 amino-terminal pro-peptide (P1NP) were decreased. In contrast, following ovariectomy, Cbl-/- and Cbl-b-/- mice showed significant bone loss in the tibiae and L2 vertebrae, concomitant with increased serum CTX and P1NP levels. These data indicate that while lack of Cbl or Cbl-b distinctly affects bone remodeling, only the loss of Cbl-PI3K interaction protects mice from significant bone loss following ovariectomy.
Volume
67
First Page
1
Last Page
9
ISSN
1873-2763
Published In/Presented At
Adapala, N. S., Holland, D., Scanlon, V., Barbe, M. F., Langdon, W. Y., Tsygankov, A. Y., Lorenzo, J. A., & Sanjay, A. (2014). Loss of Cbl-PI3K interaction in mice prevents significant bone loss following ovariectomy. Bone, 67, 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bone.2014.06.013
Disciplines
Dentistry | Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
24994594
Department(s)
Department of Dental Medicine
Document Type
Article