Contrasting effects of Ksr2, an obesity gene, on trabecular bone volume and bone marrow adiposity

Author:

Gomez Gustavo A1ORCID,Rundle Charles H12,Xing Weirong12,Kesavan Chandrasekhar12,Pourteymoor Sheila1,Lewis Robert E3ORCID,Powell David R4ORCID,Mohan Subburaman12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. VA Loma Linda Healthcare System

2. Loma Linda University Medical Center

3. University of Nebraska Medical Center

4. Lexicon Pharmaceuticals

Abstract

Pathological obesity and its complications are associated with an increased propensity for bone fractures. Humans with certain genetic polymorphisms at the kinase suppressor of ras2 (KSR2) locus develop severe early-onset obesity and type 2 diabetes. Both conditions are phenocopied in mice with Ksr2 deleted, but whether this affects bone health remains unknown. Here we studied the bones of global Ksr2 null mice and found that Ksr2 negatively regulates femoral, but not vertebral, bone mass in two genetic backgrounds, while the paralogous gene, Ksr1, was dispensable for bone homeostasis. Mechanistically, KSR2 regulates bone formation by influencing adipocyte differentiation at the expense of osteoblasts in the bone marrow. Compared with Ksr2’s known role as a regulator of feeding by its function in the hypothalamus, pair-feeding and osteoblast-specific conditional deletion of Ksr2 reveals that Ksr2 can regulate bone formation autonomously. Despite the gains in appendicular bone mass observed in the absence of Ksr2, bone strength, as well as fracture healing response, remains compromised in these mice. This study highlights the interrelationship between adiposity and bone health and provides mechanistic insights into how Ksr2, an adiposity and diabetic gene, regulates bone metabolism.

Funder

National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases

National Institute on Aging

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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