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Featured researches published by Ben-hua Sun.


Endocrinology | 1999

A role for interleukin-6 in parathyroid hormone-induced bone resorption in vivo.

Andrew Grey; Maryann Mitnick; Urszula S. Masiukiewicz; Ben-hua Sun; Stuart Rudikoff; Robert L. Jilka; Stavros C. Manolagas; Karl L. Insogna

Parathyroid hormone (PTH) exerts its regulatory effects on calcium homeostasis in part by stimulating the release of calcium from the skeleton. PTH stimulates bone resorption indirectly, by inducing the production by stromal/osteoblastic cells of paracrine agents which recruit and activate the bone-resorbing cell, the osteoclast. The identity of the stromal cell/osteoblast-derived paracrine factor(s) responsible for mediating the effects of PTH on osteoclasts is uncertain. Recently, it has been demonstrated that the cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6), which potently induces osteoclastogenesis, is produced by osteoblastic cells in response to PTH. Further, we have reported that circulating levels of IL-6 are elevated in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, and correlate with biochemical markers of bone resorption. Thus, IL-6 may play a permissive role in PTH-induced bone resorption. In the current studies, we demonstrate that low-dose PTH infusion in rodents increased serum levels of IL-6, coincident with...


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2008

Expression and Synthesis of Bone Morphogenetic Proteins by Osteoclasts: A Possible Path to Anabolic Bone Remodeling

Rama Garimella; Sarah E. Tague; Jianghong Zhang; Frank Belibi; Niru Nahar; Ben-hua Sun; Karl L. Insogna; Jinxi Wang; H. Clarke Anderson

Skeletal remodeling is a finely orchestrated process coupling bone formation to bone resorption. The dynamics of coupling is regulated by the microenvironment at the bone remodeling site, which in turn is influenced by the intercellular communication between cells like osteoclasts and osteoblasts. Understanding the dynamics of coupling is important in devising new therapeutic approaches to the treatment of skeletal diseases characterized by disturbances in the bone remodeling process. In this study, we report the localization of bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) in osteoclasts generated from primary cocultures of bone marrow cells from mouse femur and tibia with mouse calvarial osteoblasts, using immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization. Positive staining was seen in osteoclasts for BMP-2, -4, -6, and -7. Real-time PCR was used to quantitatively confirm the expression of transcripts for BMP-2, BMP-4, and BMP-6 mRNA in murine osteoclasts. Finally, the presence of BMP-2, -4, -6, and-7 proteins was confirmed in osteoclast lysates by Western blotting. Overall, our data suggest a possible direct role for osteoclasts in promoting bone formation via expression and synthesis of BMPs, which then would play an important role in promoting the recruitment, proliferation, and differentiation of osteoblasts at bone resorption sites.


Blood | 2009

Dominant role of CD47–thrombospondin-1 interactions in myeloma-induced fusion of human dendritic cells: implications for bone disease

Anjli Kukreja; Soroosh Radfar; Ben-hua Sun; Karl L. Insogna; Madhav V. Dhodapkar

Lytic bone disease in myeloma is characterized by an increase in multinucleate osteoclasts in close proximity to tumor cells. However, the nature of osteoclast precursors and the mechanisms underlying multinuclearity are less understood. Here we show that culture of myeloma cell lines as well as primary myeloma cells with human dendritic cells (DCs) but not monocytes or macrophages leads to spontaneous cell-cell fusion, which then leads to the facile formation of multinucleate bone-resorbing giant cells. Osteoclastogenesis is cell contact dependent, leading to up-regulation of thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) in DCs. Disruption of CD47-TSP-1 interaction by TSP-1-blocking antibodies or down-regulation of CD47 on tumor cells by RNA interference abrogates tumor-induced osteoclast formation. Blockade of CD47-TSP-1 interactions also inhibits receptor activator for nuclear factor kappaB ligand- and macrophage colony-stimulating factor-induced formation of osteoclasts from human monocytes. Further, TSP-1 blockade attenuates hypercalcemia induced by parathyroid hormone in vivo. These data point to a role for CD47-TSP-1 interactions in regulating cell-fusion events involved in human osteoclast formation. They also suggest that DCs, known to be enriched in myeloma tumors, may be direct precursors for tumor-associated osteoclasts. Disruption of CD47-TSP-1 interactions or preventing the recruitment of DCs to tumors may provide novel approaches to therapy of myeloma bone disease and osteoporosis.


Endocrinology | 2000

Nuclear Factor-κB p50 Is Required for Tumor Necrosis Factor-α-Induced Colony-Stimulating Factor-1 Gene Expression in Osteoblasts1

Gang-Qing Yao; Ben-hua Sun; Karl L. Insogna; Eleanor C. Weir

Colony-stimulating factor (CSF)-1 is a hematopoietic growth factor that is released by osteoblasts and is recognized to play a critical role in bone remodeling in vivo and in vitro. We have reported that osteoblasts express CSF-1 constitutively and that tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, a potent bone-resorbing agent, increases CSF-1 gene expression by a transcriptional mechanism. In the present study, we report that an NF-kappaB site in the CSF-1 promoter is required for TNF-alpha-induced CSF-1 expression in osteoblasts. As determined by electrophoretic mobility shift assays, antiserum against the NF-kappaB-binding protein, p50, retarded the mobility of the inducible complex, whereas antisera against p52, p65, c-Rel, Rel B, IkappaB alpha, IkappaB gamma, and Bcl-3 had no effect. To further confirm that p50 is necessary for TNF-alpha-induced CSF-1 expression in osteoblasts, CSF-1 messenger RNA expression from untreated and TNF-alpha-treated osteoblasts, prepared from wild-type and p50 knock-out mice, was examined by Northern analysis. CSF-1 messenger RNA was increased by TNF treatment in wild-type mice but not in NF-kappaB p50 knock-out mice. Our findings support the conclusion that the NF-kappaB subunit p50 is critical for TNF-induced CSF-1 expression in osteoblasts.


Calcified Tissue International | 2002

A Role for Cell-Surface CSF-1 in Osteoblast-mediated Osteoclastogenesis

Gang-Qing Yao; Ben-hua Sun; E.C. Weir; Karl L. Insogna

CSF-1 is required for osteoblast-mediated osteoclast formation. Osteoblasts produce soluble (sCSF-1) and cell-surface forms of CSF-1 (also known as membrane-bound CSF-1, mCSF-1) but their individual contributions to osteoclastogenesis remain unclear. Using glutaraldehyde-fixed primary murine osteoblasts as a source of mCSF-1, osteoblasts from op/op mice as a source for other osteoblast-derived osteoclastogenic factors and murine bone marrow as a source of osteoclast progenitors, osteoclast-like cells (OCL) formation was observed after 7-9 days of co-culture. In contrast, no OCL formation occurred when mCSF-1 expressed by primary murine osteoblasts was blocked by CSF-1 antibody pretreatment or when op/op osteoblasts were substituted for primary murine osteoblasts in the co-culture system. Osteoclast formation was also significantly inhibited when murine primary osteoblasts were pretreated with an antisense phosphorothioate oligonucleotide against mCSF-1. Finally, mCSF-1 and sCSF-1 were synergistic in stimulating OCL formation. These data support the conclusion that mCSF-1 plays an important role in osteoblast-mediated osteoclastogenesis within the bone microenvironment.


Endocrinology | 2010

The Effect of Dietary Protein on Intestinal Calcium Absorption in Rats

Erin Gaffney-Stomberg; Ben-hua Sun; Carrie E. Cucchi; Christine Simpson; Caren M. Gundberg; Jane E. Kerstetter; Karl L. Insogna

Increasing dietary protein intake in humans acutely increases urinary calcium. Isotopic absorption studies have indicated that, at least in the short term, this is primarily due to increased intestinal Ca absorption. To explore the mechanisms underlying dietary proteins effect on intestinal Ca absorption, female Sprague Dawley rats were fed a control (20%), low (5%), or high (40%) protein diet for 7 d, and Ca balance was measured during d 4-7. On d 7, duodenal mucosa was harvested and brush border membrane vesicles (BBMVs) were prepared to evaluate Ca uptake. By d 7, urinary calcium was more than 2-fold higher in the 40% protein group compared with control (4.2 mg/d vs. 1.7 mg/d; P < 0.05). Rats consuming the 40% protein diet both absorbed and retained more Ca compared with the 5% protein group (absorption: 48.5% vs. 34.1% and retention: 45.8% vs. 33.7%, respectively; P < 0.01). Ca uptake was increased in BBMVs prepared from rats consuming the high-protein diet. Maximum velocity (V(max)) was higher in the BBMVs prepared from the high-protein group compared with those from the low-protein group (90 vs. 36 nmol Ca/mg protein x min, P < 0.001; 95% CI: 46-2486 and 14-55, respectively). The Michaelis Menten constant (K(m)) was unchanged (2.2 mm vs. 1.8 mm, respectively; P = 0.19). We conclude that in rats, as in humans, acute increases in protein intake result in hypercalciuria due to augmented intestinal Ca absorption. BBMV Ca uptake studies suggest that higher protein intake improves Ca absorption, at least in part, by increasing transcellular Ca uptake.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2014

Measurement of Plasma, Serum, and Platelet Serotonin in Individuals With High Bone Mass and Mutations in LRP5

Grace S. Lee; Christine Simpson; Ben-hua Sun; Chen Yao; Dinah Foer; Becky Sullivan; Susann Matthes; Natalia Alenina; Joseph L. Belsky; Michael Bader; Karl L. Insogna

It has recently been suggested that the low‐density lipoprotein receptor‐related protein 5 (LRP5) regulates bone mass by suppressing secretion of serotonin from duodenal enterochromaffin cells. In mice with targeted expression of a high bone mass–causing (HBM‐causing) LRP5 mutation and in humans with HBM LRP5 mutations, circulating serotonin levels have been reported to be lower than in controls whereas individuals with loss‐of‐function mutations in LRP5 have high blood serotonin. In contrast, others have reported that conditionally activating a knock‐in allele of an HBM‐causing LRP5 mutation in several tissues, or genetic deletion of LRP5 in mice has no effect on serum serotonin levels. To further explore the possible association between HBM‐causing LRP5 mutations and circulating serotonin, levels of the hormone were measured in the platelet poor plasma (PPP), serum, and platelet pellet (PP) of 16 affected individuals from 2 kindreds with HBM‐causing LRP5 mutations (G171V and N198S) and 16 age‐matched controls. When analyzed by HPLC, there were no differences in levels of serotonin in PPP and PP between affected individuals and age‐matched controls. Similarly, when analyzed by ELISA, there were no differences in PPP or PP between these two groups. By ELISA, serum levels of serotonin were higher in the affected individuals when compared to age‐matched controls. A subgroup analysis of only the G171V subjects (n = 14) demonstrated that there were no differences in PPP and PP serotonin between affected individuals and controls when analyzed by HPLC. PP serotonin was lower in the affected individuals when measured by ELISA but serum serotonin levels were not different. We conclude that there is no change in PPP serotonin in individuals with HBM‐causing mutations in LRP5.


Endocrinology | 2008

The Anabolic Response to Parathyroid Hormone Is Augmented in Rac2 Knockout Mice

Tsutomu Kawano; Nancy Troiano; Douglas J. Adams; Jian-Jun Wu; Ben-hua Sun; Karl L. Insogna

PTH is the only currently available anabolic therapy for osteoporosis. In clinical practice, the skeletal response to PTH varies and because therapy is limited to 2 yr, approaches to maximize the therapeutic response are desirable. Rac2 is a small GTPase that is expressed only in hematopoietic tissue. Rac2(-/-) mice have a slight increase in bone mass and osteoclasts isolated from these animals have reduced basal resorptive activity and reduced chemotaxis. To evaluate the anabolic response to PTH in Rac2(-/-) mice, we treated 18 Rac2(-/-) and 17 control, age-matched wild-type animals once daily for 28 d with 80 ng/g body weight of h(1-34)PTH. Treatment resulted in significantly greater increments in spinal, femur, and total bone density in the Rac2(-/-) as compared with wild-type animals. Microcomputed tomography analysis demonstrated greater increases in trabecular thickness and cortical thickness in the knockout mice. Interestingly, histomorphometric analysis showed an equivalent increase in osteoblast and osteoclast number in response to PTH treatment in both groups of animals. However, as judged by changes in serum markers, the resorptive response to PTH was impaired. Thus, telopeptide of type 1 collagen was 15.9+/-6.9 ng/ml after PTH treatment in the knockout animals and 26.8+/-11.1 ng/ml in the PTH-treated wild-type group. In contrast, serum aminoterminal propeptide of type 1 collagen and osteocalcin were equivalent in both groups. We conclude that, in the genetic absence of Rac2, the anabolic response to PTH is increased. This appears to be due to attenuated resorptive activity of osteoclasts.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2016

Deletion of Rac in Mature Osteoclasts Causes Osteopetrosis, an Age‐Dependent Change in Osteoclast Number and a Reduced Number of Osteoblasts In Vivo

Meiling Zhu; Ben-hua Sun; Katarzyna Saar; Christine Simpson; Nancy Troiano; Sarah L. Dallas; LeAnn M. Tiede-Lewis; Erin Nevius; João P. Pereira; Robert S. Weinstein; Steven M. Tommasini; Karl L. Insogna

Rac1 and Rac2 are thought to have important roles in osteoclasts. Therefore, mice with deletion of both Rac1 and Rac2 in mature osteoclasts (DKO) were generated by crossing Rac1flox/flox mice with mice expressing Cre in the cathepsin K locus and then mating these animals with Rac2‐/‐ mice. DKO mice had markedly impaired tooth eruption. Bone mineral density (BMD) was increased 21% to 33% in 4‐ to 6‐week‐old DKO mice at all sites when measured by dual‐energy X‐ray absorptiometry (DXA) and serum cross‐linked C‐telopeptide (CTx) was reduced by 52%. The amount of metaphyseal trabecular bone was markedly increased in DKO mice, but the cortices were very thin. Spinal trabecular bone mass was increased. Histomorphometry revealed significant reductions in both osteoclast and osteoblast number and function in 4‐ to 6‐week‐old DKO animals. In 14‐ to 16‐week‐old animals, osteoclast number was increased, although bone density was further increased. DKO osteoclasts had severely impaired actin ring formation, an impaired ability to generate acid, and reduced resorptive activity in vitro. In addition, their life span ex vivo was reduced. DKO osteoblasts expressed normal differentiation markers except for the expression of osterix, which was reduced. The DKO osteoblasts mineralized normally in vitro, indicating that the in vivo defect in osteoblast function was not cell autonomous. Confocal imaging demonstrated focal disruption of the osteocytic dendritic network in DKO cortical bone. Despite these changes, DKO animals had a normal response to treatment with once‐daily parathyroid hormone (PTH). We conclude that Rac1 and Rac2 have critical roles in skeletal metabolism.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2009

Targeted overexpression of the two colony-stimulating factor-1 isoforms in osteoblasts differentially affects bone loss in ovariectomized mice

Gang-Qing Yao; Jian-Jun Wu; Shira Ovadia; Nancy Troiano; Ben-hua Sun; Karl L. Insogna

Colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF1) is one of two cytokines required for normal osteoclastogenesis. There are two major isoforms of CSF1, the cell-surface or membrane-bound isoform (mCSF1) and soluble CSF1 (sCSF1). Whether these isoforms serve nonredundant functions in bone is unclear. To explore this question, we generated transgenic mice expressing human sCSF1, human mCSF1, or both (s/mCSF1) in osteoblasts using the 2.3-kb rat alphaI-collagen promoter. Bone density determined by peripheral quantitative computed tomography was significantly reduced in mCSF1, sCSF1, and s/mCSF1 transgenic mice compared with wild-type animals. When analyzed by sex, sCSF1, and s/mCSF1, female animals but not mCSF1 female mice were found to have greater bone loss than their male littermates (-20 vs. -9.2%; P<0.05 for sCSF1 and -21.6 vs. -11.2% for s/mCSF1; P<0.01). By breeding CSF1 isoform-selective transgenic mice to an op/op background, mice were generated in which a single CSF1 isoform was the only source of the cytokine (sCSF1op/op and mCSF1op/op). Unlike osteoblast-targeted overexpression of mCSF1, selective transgenic expression of sCSF1 did not completely correct the op/op phenotype in 5-mo-old animals. Interestingly, compared with sham-ovariectomized mice of the same genotype, ovariectomy in sCSF1op/op mice led to a greater loss of spinal bone mineral density (22.1%) than was seen in either mCSF1op/op mice (12.9%) or in wild-type animals (10.9%). Our findings support the conclusion that sCSF1 and mCSF1 serve nonredundant functions in bone and that sCSF1 may play a role in mediating estrogen-deficiency bone loss.

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