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Osteoclast formation elicited by interleukin-33 stimulation is dependent upon the type of osteoclast progenitor

Version 2 2024-06-13, 17:04
Version 1 2016-02-11, 15:03
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 17:04 authored by DG Eeles, JM Hodge, PP Singh, JA Schuijers, BL Grills, MT Gillespie, DE Myers, JM Quinn
Osteoclasts are bone resorbing multinucleated cells (MNCs) derived from macrophage progenitors. IL-33 has been reported to drive osteoclastogenesis independently of receptor activator of NFκB ligand (RANKL) but this remains controversial as later studies did not confirm this. We found IL-33 clearly elicited functional dentine-resorbing osteoclast formation from human adult monocytes. However, monocytes from only 3 of 12 donors responded this way, while all responded to RANKL. Human cord blood-derived progenitors and murine bone marrow macrophages lacked an osteoclastogenic response to IL-33. In RAW264.7 cells, IL-33 elicited NFκB and p38 responses but not NFATc1 signals (suggesting poor osteoclastogenic responses) and formed only mononuclear tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase positive (TRAP(+)) cells. Since TGFβ boosts osteoclastogenesis in RAW264.7 cells we employed an IL-33/TGFβ co-treatment, which resulted in small numbers of MNCs expressing key osteoclast markers TRAP and calcitonin receptors. Thus, IL-33 possesses weak osteoclastogenic activity suggesting pathological significance and, perhaps, explaining previous conflicting reports.

History

Journal

Molecular and cellular endocrinology

Volume

399

Pagination

259-266

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1872-8057

eISSN

1872-8057

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Elsevier

Publisher

Elsevier

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