The mechanism of osteoclast differentiation induced by IL-1

JH Kim, HM Jin, K Kim, I Song, BU Youn… - The Journal of …, 2009 - journals.aai.org
JH Kim, HM Jin, K Kim, I Song, BU Youn, K Matsuo, N Kim
The Journal of Immunology, 2009journals.aai.org
IL-1 is a potent cytokine that can induce bone erosion in inflammatory sites such as
rheumatoid joint regions via activation of osteoclasts. Not only is IL-1 capable of activating
osteoclasts, but it is also a key cytokine involved in the differentiation, multinucleation, and
survival of osteoclasts. Herein, we show that IL-1 has the potential to drive osteoclast
differentiation via a receptor activator of NF-κB ligand (RANKL)/RANK-independent
mechanism. Although IL-1 has a synergistic effect on RANKL-induced osteoclast formation …
Abstract
IL-1 is a potent cytokine that can induce bone erosion in inflammatory sites such as rheumatoid joint regions via activation of osteoclasts. Not only is IL-1 capable of activating osteoclasts, but it is also a key cytokine involved in the differentiation, multinucleation, and survival of osteoclasts. Herein, we show that IL-1 has the potential to drive osteoclast differentiation via a receptor activator of NF-κB ligand (RANKL)/RANK-independent mechanism. Although IL-1 has a synergistic effect on RANKL-induced osteoclast formation, IL-1 alone cannot induce osteoclast differentiation from osteoclast precursors (bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMMs)) due to a lack of IL-1 signaling potential in these cells. However, we demonstrate that overexpression of the IL-1RI receptor in BMMs or induction of IL-1RI by c-Fos overexpression enables IL-1 alone to induce the formation of authentic osteoclasts by a RANKL/RANK-independent mechanism. The expression of IL-1RI is up-regulated by RANKL via c-Fos and NFATc1. Furthermore, the addition of IL-1 to IL-1RI overexpressing BMMs (IL-1/IL-1RI) strongly activates NF-κB, JNK, p38, and ERK which is a hallmark gene activation profile of osteoclastogenesis. Interestingly, IL-1/IL-1RI does not induce expression of c-Fos or NFATc1 during osteoclast differentiation, although basal levels of c-Fos and NFATc1 seem to be required. Rather, IL-1/IL-1RI strongly activates MITF, which subsequently induces osteoclast-specific genes such as osteoclast-associated receptor and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase. Together, these results reveal that IL-1 has the potential to induce osteoclast differentiation via activation of microphthalmia transcription factor under specific microenvironmental conditions.
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