Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Oleoyl serine, an endogenous N -acyl amide, modulates bone remodeling and mass

2010; National Academy of Sciences; Volume: 107; Issue: 41 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1073/pnas.0912479107

ISSN

1091-6490

Autores

Reem Smoum, Arik Bar, Bo Tan, Garry Milman, Malka Attar-Namdar, Orr Ofek, Jordyn Stuart, Alon Bajayo, Joseph Tam, Vardit Kram, David K. O’Dell, Michael J. Walker, Heather B. Bradshaw, Itai Bab, Raphael Mechoulam,

Tópico(s)

Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment

Resumo

Bone mass is determined by a continuous remodeling process, whereby the mineralized matrix is being removed by osteoclasts and subsequently replaced with newly formed bone tissue produced by osteoblasts. Here we report the presence of endogenous amides of long-chain fatty acids with amino acids or with ethanolamine ( N -acyl amides) in mouse bone. Of these compounds, N -oleoyl- l -serine (OS) had the highest activity in an osteoblast proliferation assay. In these cells, OS triggers a Gi-protein-coupled receptor and Erk1/2. It also mitigates osteoclast number by promoting osteoclast apoptosis through the inhibition of Erk1/2 phosphorylation and receptor activator of nuclear-κB ligand (RANKL) expression in bone marrow stromal cells and osteoblasts. In intact mice, OS moderately increases bone volume density mainly by inhibiting bone resorption. However, in a mouse ovariectomy (OVX) model for osteoporosis, OS effectively rescues bone loss by increasing bone formation and markedly restraining bone resorption. The differential effect of exogenous OS in the OVX vs. intact animals is apparently a result of an OVX-induced decrease in skeletal OS levels. These data show that OS is a previously unexplored lipid regulator of bone remodeling. It represents a lead to antiosteoporotic drug discovery, advantageous to currently available therapies, which are essentially either proformative or antiresorptive.

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