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Amylin inhibits bone resorption while the calcitonin receptor controls bone formation in vivo

Author

  • R Dacquin
  • RA Davey
  • C Laplace
  • G Levasseur
  • HA Morris
  • SR Goldring
  • Samuel Gebre-Medhin
  • DL Galson
  • JD Zajac
  • G Karsenty

Summary, in English

Amylin is a member of the calcitonin family of hormones cosecreted with insulin by pancreatic beta cells. Cell culture assays suggest that amylin could affect bone formation and bone resorption, this latter function after its binding to the calcitonin receptor (CALCR). Here we show that Amylin inactivation leads to a low bone mass due to an increase in bone resorption, whereas bone formation is unaffected. In vitro, amylin inhibits fusion of mononucleated osteoclast precursors into multinucleated osteoclasts in an ERK1/2-dependent manner. Although Amylin +/- mice like Amylin-deficient mice display a low bone mass phenotype and increased bone resorption, Calcr +/- mice display a high bone mass due to an increase in bone formation. Moreover, compound heterozygote mice for Calcr and Amylin inactivation displayed bone abnormalities observed in both Calcr +/- and Amylin +/- mice, thereby ruling out that amylin uses CALCR to inhibit osteoclastogenesis in vivo. Thus, amylin is a physiological regulator of bone resorption that acts through an unidentified receptor.

Publishing year

2004

Language

English

Pages

509-514

Publication/Series

Journal of Cell Biology

Volume

164

Issue

4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Topic

  • Medical Genetics

Keywords

  • mouse models
  • CALCR
  • islet amyloid polypeptide
  • CTR
  • osteoclast

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0021-9525