Erythropoietin Receptor (EPOR) Signaling in the Osteoclast Lineage Contributes to EPO-Induced Bone Loss in Mice

Author:

Awida Zamzam,Hiram-Bab Sahar,Bachar Almog,Saed Hussam,Zyc Dan,Gorodov Anton,Ben-Califa Nathalie,Omari Sewar,Omar Jana,Younis Liana,Iden Jennifer Ana,Graniewitz Visacovsky Liad,Gluzman Ida,Liron Tamar,Raphael-Mizrahi Bitya,Kolomansky Albert,Rauner MartinaORCID,Wielockx BenORCID,Gabet YankelORCID,Neumann DroritORCID

Abstract

Erythropoietin (EPO) is a pleiotropic cytokine that classically drives erythropoiesis but can also induce bone loss by decreasing bone formation and increasing resorption. Deletion of the EPO receptor (EPOR) on osteoblasts or B cells partially mitigates the skeletal effects of EPO, thereby implicating a contribution by EPOR on other cell lineages. This study was designed to define the role of monocyte EPOR in EPO-mediated bone loss, by using two mouse lines with conditional deletion of EPOR in the monocytic lineage. Low-dose EPO attenuated the reduction in bone volume (BV/TV) in Cx3cr1Cre EPORf/f female mice (27.05%) compared to controls (39.26%), but the difference was not statistically significant. To validate these findings, we increased the EPO dose in LysMCre model mice, a model more commonly used to target preosteoclasts. There was a significant reduction in both the increase in the proportion of bone marrow preosteoclasts (CD115+) observed following high-dose EPO administration and the resulting bone loss in LysMCre EPORf/f female mice (44.46% reduction in BV/TV) as compared to controls (77.28%), without interference with the erythropoietic activity. Our data suggest that EPOR in the monocytic lineage is at least partially responsible for driving the effect of EPO on bone mass.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

Dotan Hemato-oncology Fund, the Cancer Biology Research Center, Tel Aviv University

German-Israeli Foundation for Scientific Research and Development

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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