In this population of CL patients displaying variable degrees of complexity and severity, almost two-thirds of patients could be initially managed without systemic therapy. Of these, 60 were cured before day 60. The WHO-recommended stepwise approach favoring initial local therapy therefore resulted in at least 44% of all patients being cured without exposure to the risk of systemic adverse events. Efforts are needed to further simplify local therapy of CL and to improve the management of patients with complex lesions and/or preexisting comorbidities.
BackgroundIn osteoporosis, bone loss is accompanied by increased marrow adiposity. Given their proximity in the bone marrow and their shared origin, a dialogue between adipocytes and osteoblasts could be a factor in the competition between human Mesenchymal Stem Cells (hMSC) differentiation routes, leading to adipocyte differentiation at the expense of osteoblast differentiation. The adipocyte/osteoblast balance is highly regulated at the level of gene transcription. In our work, we focused on PPARgamma, CEBPalpha and CEBPdelta, as these transcription factors are seen as master regulators of adipogenesis and expressed precociously, and on leptin and adiponectin, considered as adipocyte marker genes. In 2010, our group has demonstrated, thanks to a coculture model, that in the presence of hMSC-derived adipocytes (hMSC-Adi), hMSC-derived osteoblasts (hMSC-Ost) express lesser amounts of osteogenic markers but exhibit the expression of typical adipogenic genes. Nevertheless, the mechanisms underlying this modulation of gene expression are not clarified. Recently, adipocytes were described as releasing extracellular vesicles (EVs), containing and transferring adipocyte specific transcripts, like PPARgamma, leptin and adiponectin. Here, we investigated whether EVs could be the way in which adipocytes transfer adipogenic RNAs in our coculture model.ResultsWe observed in hMSC-Ost incubated in hAdi-CM an increase in the adipogenic PPARγ, leptin, CEBPα and CEBPδ transcripts as well as the anti-osteoblastic miR-138, miR30c, miR125a, miR-125b, miR-31 miRNAs, probably implicated in the observed osteocalcin (OC) and osteopontin (OP) expression decrease. Moreover, EVs were isolated from conditioned media collected from cultures of hMSC at different stages of adipocyte differentiation and these specific adipogenic transcripts were detected inside. Finally, thanks to interspecies conditioned media exposition, we could highlight for the first time a horizontal transfer of adipogenic transcripts from medullary adipocytes to osteoblasts.ConclusionsHere, we have shown, for the first time, RNA transfer between hMSC-derived adipocytes and osteoblasts through EVs. Additional studies are needed to clarify if this mechanism has a role in the adipocytic switch driven on osteoblasts by adipocytes inside bone marrow and if EVs could be a target component to regulate the competition between osteoblasts and adipocytes in the prevention or in the therapy of osteoporosis and other osteopenia.
Osteoporosis is characterized by reduced bone formation and accumulation of adipocytes in the bone marrow compartment. The decrease in bone mass results from an imbalance between osteoclast-mediated bone resorption and osteoblast-mediated bone formation. The deficiency of bone cells to replace the resorpted bone can be due to a preferential differentiation of bone marrow stromal cells into adipocytes at the expense of osteoblasts. Consequently, the processes that control the differentiation of osteoclasts, osteoblasts and adipocytes play a crucial role in bone metabolism. It is known that epigenetic mechanisms are critical regulator of the differentiation programs for cell fate and moreover are subject to changes during aging. Here, we summarize recent findings on the role of epigenetics in the modulation of mechanisms that may be associated with osteoporosis. In particular, we focus on disturbances in the bone remodeling process described in human studies that address the epigenetic regulation of the osteoblast/adipocyte balance.
One challenging point in analyzing cellular secretome collected as conditioned medium is cross-contamination by cell culture media components, especially bovine serum proteins. A common approach for serum removal is to wash the cells, an alternative is to grow cells using serum-free conditions. Given that the sample processing may influence the phenotype of cells and thus the secretome, it is important to establish the optimal protocol for each cell type. In this study, we compared two methods for preparing conditioned medium from human adipocytes derived from mesenchymal stem cells. Cells were either washed twice with PBS or cultured the last four days of differentiation in serum-free adipogenic medium. Gene expression of the cells was evaluated by using real-time PCR and 1D LC-MS/MS was used to compare secreted proteins present in the culture supernatants. Surprisingly, results showed significant differences in gene expression patterns of the cells and in protein content of the conditioned media and suggested that PBS washes induced severe modifications of the phenotype of cells and thus changes in protein secretion profiles. These data emphasize the significant variations in protein species related to cell manipulations and underline the importance of procedure optimization prior to any proteomic investigation.
Our preliminary findings have lead us to propose bone marrow adipocyte secretions as new contributors to bone loss. Indeed, using a coculture model based on human bone marrow stromal cells, we previously showed that soluble factors secreted by adipocytes induced the conversion of osteoblasts towards an adipocyte-like phenotype. In this study, microarray gene expression profiling showed profound transcriptomic changes in osteoblasts following coculture and confirmed the enrichment of the adipocyte gene signature. Double immunofluorescence microscopic analyses demonstrated the coexpression of adipogenic and osteoblastic specific markers in individual cells, providing evidence for a transdifferentiation event. At the molecular level, this conversion was associated with upregulated expression levels of reprogramming genes and a decrease in the DNA methylation level. In line with these in vitro results, preliminary immunohistochemical analysis of bone sections revealed adipogenic marker expression in osteoblasts from elderly subjects. Altogether, these data suggest that osteoblast transdifferentiation could contribute to decreased bone mass upon ageing.
Sclerostin is a Wnt signaling pathway inhibitor that negatively regulates bone formation. Bone-marrow-derived stromal cell (BMSC) differentiation is influenced by the Wnt pathway, leading to the hypothesis that higher levels of sclerostin might be associated with an increase in bone marrow adiposity (BMA). The main purpose of this study was to determine whether a relationship exists between circulating sclerostin and BMA in post-menopausal women with and without fragility fractures. The relationships between circulating sclerostin and body composition parameters were then examined. The outcomes measures included vertebral and hip proton density fat fraction (PDFF) using the water fat imaging (WFI) MRI method; DXA scans; and laboratory measurements, including serum sclerostin. In 199 participants, no significant correlations were found between serum sclerostin and PDFF. In both groups, serum sclerostin was correlated positively with bone mineral density (R = 0.27 to 0.56) and negatively with renal function (R = −0.22 to −0.29). Serum sclerostin correlated negatively with visceral adiposity in both groups (R = −0.24 to −0.32). Serum sclerostin correlated negatively with total body fat (R = −0.47) and appendicular lean mass (R = −0.26) in the fracture group, but not in the controls. No evidence of a relationship between serum sclerostin and BMA was found. However, serum sclerostin was negatively correlated with body composition components, such as visceral adiposity, total body fat and appendicular lean mass.
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