The Effects of Aging and Sex Steroid Deficiency on the Murine Skeleton Are Independent and Mechanistically Distinct

  • Serra Ucer
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA
  • Srividhya Iyer
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA
  • Ha-Neui Kim
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA
  • Li Han
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA
  • Christine Rutlen
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA
  • Kelly Allison
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA
  • Jeff D Thostenson
    Department of BiostatisticsUniversity of Arkansas for Medical SciencesLittle RockARUSA
  • Rafael de Cabo
    Translational Gerontology BranchNational Institute on AgingBaltimoreMDUSA
  • Robert L Jilka
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA
  • Charles O'Brien
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA
  • Maria Almeida
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA
  • Stavros C Manolagas
    Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Center for Osteoporosis and Metabolic Bone DiseasesUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare SystemLittle RockARUSA

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<jats:title>ABSTRACT</jats:title> <jats:sec> <jats:title> </jats:title> <jats:p>Old age and sex steroid deficiency are the two most critical factors for the development of osteoporosis. It remains unknown, however, whether the molecular culprits of the two conditions are similar or distinct. We show herein that at 19.5 months of age—a time by which the age-dependent decline of cortical and cancellous bone mass and cortical porosity were fully manifested in C57BL/6J mice—these animals remained functionally estrogen sufficient. Transgenic mice with conditional expression of mitochondria-targeted catalase—a potent H2O2 inactivating enzyme—in cells of the myeloid lineage (mitoCAT;LysM-Cre mice) were protected from the loss of cortical, but not cancellous, bone caused by gonadectomy in either sex. Consistent with these findings, in vitro studies with ERα-deficient Prx1+ cells and gonadectomized young adult mice showed that in both sexes decreased ERα signaling in Prx1+ cells leads to an increase in SDF1, a.k.a. CXCL12, an osteoclastogenic cytokine whose effects were abrogated in macrophages from mitoCAT;LysM-Cre mice. In contrast to sex steroid deficiency, the adverse effects of aging on either cortical or cancellous bone were unaffected in mitoCAT;LysM-Cre mice. On the other hand, attenuation of H2O2 generation in cells of the mesenchymal lineage targeted by Prx1-Cre partially prevented the loss of cortical bone caused by old age. Our results suggest the effects of sex steroid deficiency and aging on the murine skeleton are independent and result from distinct mechanisms. In the former, the prevailing mechanism of the cortical bone loss in both sexes is increased osteoclastogenesis caused by estrogen deficiency; this is likely driven, at least in part, by mesenchymal/stromal cell–derived SDF1. Decreased osteoblastogenesis, owing in part to increased H2O2, combined with increased osteoclastogenesis caused by aging mechanisms independent of estrogen deficiency, are the prevailing mechanisms of the loss of cortical bone with old age. © 2016 American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.</jats:p> </jats:sec>

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