Author:
Zhang Yanan,Nong Haibin,Bai Yiguang,Zhou Quan,Zhang Qiong,Liu Mingfu,Liu Pan,Zeng Gaofeng,Zong Shaohui
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The development and maintenance of normal bone tissue is maintained by balanced communication between osteoblasts and osteoclasts. The invasion of cancer cells disrupts this balance, leading to osteolysis. As the only bone resorbing cells in vivo, osteoclasts play important roles in cancer-induced osteolysis. However, the role of 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase-1 (PDK1) in osteoclast resorption remains unclear.
Methods
In our study, we used a receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappa B (RANK) promoter‐driven Cre‐LoxP system to conditionally delete the PDK1 gene in osteoclasts in mice. We observed the effect of osteoclast‐specific knockout of PDK1 on prostate cancer-induced osteolysis. Bone marrow-derived macrophage cells (BMMs) were extracted and induced to differentiate osteoclasts in vitro to explore the role of PDK1 in osteoclasts.
Results
In this study, we found that PDK1 conditional knockout (cKO) mice exhibited smaller body sizes when compared to the wild-type (WT) mice. Moreover, deletion of PDK1 in osteoclasts ameliorated osteolysis and rPDK1educed bone resorption markers in the murine model of prostate cancer-induced osteolysis. In vivo, we discovered that osteoclast‐specific knockout of suppressed RANKL-induced osteoclastogenesis, bone resorption function, and osteoclast-specific gene expression (Ctsk, TRAP, MMP-9, NFATc1). Western blot analyses of RANKL-induced signaling pathways showed that conditional knockout of PDK1 in osteoclasts inhibited the early nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) activation, which consequently suppressed the downstream induction of NFATc1.
Conclusion
These findings demonstrated that PDK1 performs an important role in osteoclastogenesis and prostate cancer-induced osteolysis by modulating the PDK1/AKT/NF-κB signaling pathway.
Funder
the 22nd Batch of Guangxi Ten Hundred Thousand Talents Project
The National Natural Science Foundation of China
"139" Plan for training high-level medical backbone talents in Guangxi
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC