» Articles » PMID: 2048435

Structural Requirements for the Action of Parathyroid Hormone-related Protein (PTHrP) on Bone Resorption by Isolated Osteoclasts

Overview
Date 1991 Jan 1
PMID 2048435
Citations 12
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) plays a major role in the syndrome of humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy (HHM) by its actions on bone and kidney. In this study an isolated osteoclast bone resorption assay was used to investigate the actions of this peptide and the structure-activity relationships for its resorption effect. As with PTH, neither synthetic nor recombinant PTHrP preparations stimulated resorption within highly purified osteoclast populations. Resorption was stimulated only in the presence of contaminating osteoblasts or in cocultures with the osteoblast-like cell line UMR-106. In the presence of osteoblasts PTHrP-(1-34) and PTHrP-(1-84) stimulated bone resorption in a dose-dependent manner with a potency comparable to that of PTH-(1-34) on a molar basis. The biologic activity of the PTHrP was shown to reside in the first 34 amino acids, and within that region the structural requirements for promotion of osteoclastic resorption resembled closely those for promotion of cyclic AMP formation in osteoblast-like cells. Using emulsion autoradiography with iodinated PTHrP-(1-34) and PTHrP-(1-84) on mixed bone cell preparations from neonatal rats, specific binding was demonstrated only to osteoblasts, not to osteoclasts. These results clearly demonstrate that PTHrP is a potent stimulator of bone resorption and that these effects are, like those of PTH, mediated by initial actions upon cells of the osteoblast lineage.

Citing Articles

PTH1R Actions on Bone Using the cAMP/Protein Kinase A Pathway.

Martin T Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2022; 12:833221.

PMID: 35126319 PMC: 8807523. DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.833221.


The Pathophysiology of Osteoporosis after Spinal Cord Injury.

Shams R, Drasites K, Zaman V, Matzelle D, Shields D, Garner D Int J Mol Sci. 2021; 22(6).

PMID: 33802713 PMC: 8002377. DOI: 10.3390/ijms22063057.


RANKL/OPG; Critical role in bone physiology.

Martin T, Sims N Rev Endocr Metab Disord. 2015; 16(2):131-9.

PMID: 25557611 DOI: 10.1007/s11154-014-9308-6.


Historically significant events in the discovery of RANK/RANKL/OPG.

Martin T World J Orthop. 2013; 4(4):186-97.

PMID: 24147254 PMC: 3801238. DOI: 10.5312/wjo.v4.i4.186.


Inhibition of antigen presentation and T cell costimulation blocks PTH-induced bone loss.

Bedi B, Li J, Grassi F, Tawfeek H, Weitzmann M, Pacifici R Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2010; 1192:215-21.

PMID: 20392239 PMC: 3269765. DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05216.x.