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Distinct differences between calvarial and long bone osteocytes in cell morphologies, gene expression and aging responses.

Authors :
Gao, Minhao
Zhu, Bin
Fan, Jing
Gao, Youshui
Xue, Feng
Li, Guangyi
Hubbard, Alysia
Gao, Xiangrong
Sun, Jing
Ling, Jing
Cao, Longxiang
Liu, Delin
Yuan, Jun
Jiang, Qing
Papadimitriou, John
Zou, Weiguo
Feng, Jian Q.
Yang, Liu
Zhang, Changqing
Gao, Junjie
Source :
FEBS Journal; Aug2023, Vol. 290 Issue 16, p4074-4091, 18p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Osteocytes are the terminally differentiated bone cells resulted from bone formation. Although there are two distinct processes of bone formation, intramembranous and endochondral ossifications contributing to the formation of calvarial and long bones, it is not clear whether the distinct pathways determine the differences between calvaria and femoral cortical bone derived osteocytes. In the present study, we employed confocal structured illumination microscopy and mRNA‐sequencing analysis to characterize the morphologic and transcriptomic expression of osteocytes from murine calvaria and mid‐shaft femoral cortical bone. Structured illumination microscopy and geometric modelling showed round shaped and irregularly scattered calvarial osteocytes compared to spindle shaped and orderly arrayed cortical osteocytes. mRNA‐sequencing analysis indicated different transcriptomic profiles between calvarial and cortical osteocytes and provided evidence that mechanical response of osteocytes may contribute to geometrical differences. Furthermore, transcriptomic analysis showed that these two groups of osteocytes come from distinct pathways with 121 ossification‐related genes differentially expressed. Analysis of correlation between ossification and osteocyte geometries via a Venn diagram showed that several genes related to ossification, cytoskeleton organization and dendrite development were differentially expressed between calvarial and cortical osteocytes. Finally, we demonstrated that aging disrupted the organization of dendrites and cortical osteocytes but had no significant effects on calvarial osteocytes. Together, we conclude that calvarial and cortical osteocytes are different in various aspects, which is probably the consequence of their distinct pathways of ossification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1742464X
Volume :
290
Issue :
16
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
FEBS Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169970934
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/febs.16797