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Am J Physiol Cell Physiol (August 2, 2006). doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00611.2005
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Submitted on December 8, 2005
Accepted on July 26, 2006

Mechanically stimulated osteocytes regulate osteoblastic activity via gap junctions

Amanda Faith Taylor1, Marnie Marie Saunders1, Danielle L Shingle1, John M Cimbala2, Zhiyi Zhou1, and Henry J Donahue1*

1 Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, The Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania, United States
2 Department of Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, United States

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: hdonahue{at}psu.edu.

The strong correlation between a bone's architectural properties and the mechanical forces that it experiences has long been attributed to the existence of a cell that not only detects mechanical load but also structurally adapts the bone matrix to counter it. One of the most likely cellular candidates for such a "mechanostat" is the osteocyte, which resides within the mineralized bone matrix and is perfectly situated to detect mechanically induced signals. However, as osteocytes can neither form nor resorb bone, it has been hypothesized that they orchestrate mechanically induced bone remodeling by coordinating the actions of cells residing on the bone surface, such as osteoblasts. To investigate this hypothesis, we developed a novel osteocyte-osteoblast co-culture model that mimics in vivo systems by permitting us to expose osteocytes to physiological levels of fluid shear while shielding osteoblasts from it. Our results show that osteocytes exposed to a fluid shear rate of 4.4 dynes/cm2 rapidly increase the alkaline phosphatase activity of the shielded osteoblasts and that osteocytic-osteoblastic physical contact is a prerequisite. Furthermore, both functional gap junctional intercellular communication and the MAP kinase, ERK1/2 signaling pathway are essential components in the osteoblastic response to osteocyte communicated mechanical signals. By utilizing other non-osteocytic co-culture models we also show that the ability to mediate osteoblastic alkaline phosphatase levels in response to the application of fluid shear is a phenomena unique to osteocytes and is not reproduced by other mesenchymal cell types.




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