Abstract
AbstractThe skeleton supports the muscles in keeping the body upright against gravity while enduring thousands of daily loads. In this study, we investigated non-collagenous bone matrix proteins using osteoblast cell cultures and phylogenetic analyses to identify the molecular mechanisms involved in mechanical loading. The results indicate that the bone mechano-response is an evolutionary-driven process and that several non-collagenous proteins may significantly regulate the bone’s response to mechanical stress. According to our results, two significant evolutionary transitions in vertebrate locomotion shaped the roles of non-collagenous proteins in humans: the water-to-land transition, which increased mechanical stress on the limbs, and the evolution to bipedalism in humans, which altered the distribution of stress on the lower and upper limbs. Fetuin A, positively selected in both evolutionary transitions, showed the most significant expression change during mechanical stimulation.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory