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Dive into the research topics where Paul J. Niziolek is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul J. Niziolek.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Mechanical Stimulation of Bone in Vivo Reduces Osteocyte Expression of Sost/Sclerostin

Alexander G. Robling; Paul J. Niziolek; Lee Ann Baldridge; Keith W. Condon; Matthew R. Allen; Imranul Alam; Sara M. Mantila; Jelica Gluhak-Heinrich; Teresita Bellido; Stephen E. Harris; Charles H. Turner

Sclerostin, the protein product of the Sost gene, is a potent inhibitor of bone formation. Among bone cells, sclerostin is found nearly exclusively in the osteocytes, the cell type that historically has been implicated in sensing and initiating mechanical signaling. The recent discovery of the antagonistic effects of sclerostin on Lrp5 receptor signaling, a crucial mediator of skeletal mechanotransduction, provides a potential mechanism for the osteocytes to control mechanotransduction, by adjusting their sclerostin (Wnt inhibitory) signal output to modulate Wnt signaling in the effector cell population. We investigated the mechanoregulation of Sost and sclerostin under enhanced (ulnar loading) and reduced (hindlimb unloading) loading conditions. Sost transcripts and sclerostin protein levels were dramatically reduced by ulnar loading. Portions of the ulnar cortex receiving a greater strain stimulus were associated with a greater reduction in Sost staining intensity and sclerostin-positive osteocytes (revealed via in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry, respectively) than were lower strain portions of the tissue. Hindlimb unloading yielded a significant increase in Sost expression in the tibia. Modulation of sclerostin levels appears to be a finely tuned mechanism by which osteocytes coordinate regional and local osteogenesis in response to increased mechanical stimulation, perhaps via releasing the local inhibition of Wnt/Lrp5 signaling.


Nature Medicine | 2011

Lrp5 functions in bone to regulate bone mass

Yajun Cui; Paul J. Niziolek; Bryan T. MacDonald; Cassandra R. Zylstra; Natalia Alenina; Dan R. Robinson; Zhendong Zhong; Susann Matthes; Christina M. Jacobsen; Ronald A. Conlon; Robert Brommage; Qingyun Liu; Faika Mseeh; David R. Powell; Qi M. Yang; Brian Zambrowicz; Han Gerrits; Jan A. Gossen; Xi He; Michael Bader; Bart O. Williams; Matthew L. Warman; Alexander G. Robling

The human skeleton is affected by mutations in low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 5 (LRP5). To understand how LRP5 influences bone properties, we generated mice with osteocyte-specific expression of inducible Lrp5 mutations that cause high and low bone mass phenotypes in humans. We found that bone properties in these mice were comparable to bone properties in mice with inherited mutations. We also induced an Lrp5 mutation in cells that form the appendicular skeleton but not in cells that form the axial skeleton; we observed that bone properties were altered in the limb but not in the spine. These data indicate that Lrp5 signaling functions locally, and they suggest that increasing LRP5 signaling in mature bone cells may be a strategy for treating human disorders associated with low bone mass, such as osteoporosis.


Bone | 2011

High-bone-mass-producing mutations in the Wnt signaling pathway result in distinct skeletal phenotypes

Paul J. Niziolek; Takeisha L. Farmer; Yajun Cui; Charles H. Turner; Matthew L. Warman; Alexander G. Robling

Mutations among genes that participate in the canonical Wnt signaling pathway can lead to drastically different skeletal phenotypes, ranging from severe osteoporosis to severe osteosclerosis. Many high-bone-mass (HBM) causing mutations that occur in the LRP5 gene appear to impart the HBM phenotype, in part, by increasing resistance to soluble Wnt signaling inhibitors, including sclerostin. Sost loss-of-function mutant mice (Sost knock-out) and Lrp5 gain-of-function mutant mice (Lrp5 HBM knock-in) have high bone mass. These mutants potentially would be predicted to be phenocopies of one another, because in both cases, the sclerostin-Lrp5 interaction is disrupted. We measured bone mass, size, geometry, architecture, and strength in bones from three different genetic mouse models (Sost knock-out, Lrp5 A214V knock-in, and Lrp5 G171V knock-in) of HBM. We found that all three mouse lines had significantly elevated bone mass in the appendicular skeleton and in the cranium. Sost mutants and Lrp5 A214V mutants were statistically indistinguishable from one another in most endpoints, whereas both were largely different from the Lrp5 G171V mutants. Lrp5 G171V mutants preferentially added bone endocortically, whereas Lrp5 A214V and Sost mutants preferentially added bone periosteally. Cranial thickness and cranial nerve openings were similarly altered in all three HBM models. We also assessed serum serotonin levels as a possible mechanism accounting for the observed changes in bone mass, but no differences in serum serotonin were found in any of the three HBM mouse lines. The skeletal dissimilarities of the Lrp5 G171V mutant to the other mutants suggest that other, non-sclerostin-associated mechanisms might account for the changes in bone mass resulting from this mutation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

The p85α Subunit of Class IA Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase Regulates the Expression of Multiple Genes Involved in Osteoclast Maturation and Migration

Veerendra Munugalavadla; Sasidhar Vemula; Emily Sims; Subha Krishnan; Shi Chen; Jincheng Yan; Huijie Li; Paul J. Niziolek; Clifford M. Takemoto; Alexander G. Robling; Feng Chun Yang; Reuben Kapur

ABSTRACT Intracellular signals involved in the maturation and function of osteoclasts are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that osteoclasts express multiple regulatory subunits of class IA phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) although the expression of the full-length form of p85α is most abundant. In vivo, deficiency of p85α results in a significantly greater number of trabeculae and significantly lower spacing between trabeculae as well as increased bone mass in both males and females compared to their sex-matched wild-type controls. Consistently, p85α−/− osteoclast progenitors show impaired growth and differentiation, which is associated with reduced activation of Akt and mitogen-activated protein kinase extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (Erk1)/Erk2 in vitro. Furthermore, a significant reduction in the ability of p85α−/− osteoclasts to adhere to as well as to migrate via integrin αvβ3 was observed, which was associated with reduced bone resorption. Microarray as well as quantitative real-time PCR analysis of p85α−/− osteoclasts revealed a significant reduction in the expression of several genes associated with the maturation and migration of osteoclasts, including microphathalmia-associated transcription factor, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase, cathepsin K, and β3 integrin. Restoring the expression of the full-length form of p85α but not the version with a deletion of the Src homology-3 domain restored the maturation of p85α−/− osteoclasts to wild-type levels. These results highlight the importance of the full-length version of the p85α subunit of class IA PI3-K in controlling multiple aspects of osteoclast functions.


Bone | 2012

Mechanotransduction in bone tissue: The A214V and G171V mutations in Lrp5 enhance load-induced osteogenesis in a surface-selective manner

Paul J. Niziolek; Matthew L. Warman; Alexander G. Robling

Mechanotransduction in bone requires components of the Wnt signaling pathway to produce structurally adapted bone elements. In particular, the Wnt co-receptor LDL-receptor-related protein 5 (LRP5) appears to be a crucial protein in the mechanotransduction cascades that translate physical tissue deformation into new bone formation. Recently discovered missense mutations in LRP5 are associated with high bone mass (HBM), and the altered function of these proteins provide insight into LRP5 function in many skeletal processes, including mechanotransduction. We further investigated the role of LRP5 in bone cell mechanotransduction by applying mechanical stimulation in vivo to two different mutant mouse lines, which harbor HBM-causing missense mutations in Lrp5. Axial tibia loading was applied to mature male Lrp5 G171V and Lrp5 A214V knock-in mice, and to their wild type controls. Fluorochrome labeling revealed that 3 days of loading resulted in a significantly enhanced periosteal response in the A214V knock in mice, whereas the G171V mice exhibited a lowered osteogenic threshold on the endocortical surface. In summary, our data further highlight the importance of Lrp5 in bone cell mechanotransduction, and indicate that the HBM-causing mutations in Lrp5 can alter the anabolic response to mechanical stimulation in favor of increased bone gain.


Nature Medicine | 2014

Reply to Lrp5 regulation of bone mass and gut serotonin synthesis

Yajun Cui; Paul J. Niziolek; Bryan T. MacDonald; Natalia Alenina; Susann Matthes; Christina M. Jacobsen; Ronald A. Conlon; Robert Brommage; David R. Powell; Xi He; Michael Bader; Bart O. Williams; Matthew L. Warman; Alexander G. Robling

Aruna Kode1,5, Arnaud Obri2,5, Riccardo Paone3,5, Stavroula Kousteni1, Patricia Ducy4 & Gerard Karsenty2 1Department of Physiology & Cellular Biophysics, College of Physicians & Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA. 2Department of Genetics & Development, College of Physicians & Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA. 3Department of Biotechnological and Applied Clinical Sciences, University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy. 4Department of Pathology & Cell Biology, College of Physicians & Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA. 5These authors contributed equally to this work. e-mail: [email protected], [email protected] or gk2172@ columbia.edu


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2009

Rapamycin impairs trabecular bone acquisition from high-dose but not low-dose intermittent parathyroid hormone treatment.

Paul J. Niziolek; S. Murthy; Shana N. Ellis; Kunal Balu Sukhija; Troy A. Hornberger; Charles H. Turner; A. G. Robling

The osteo‐anabolic effects of intermittent parathyroid hormone (PTH) treatment require insulin‐like growth factor (IGF) signaling through the IGF‐I receptor. A major downstream target of the IGF‐I receptor (via Akt) is the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), a kinase involved in protein synthesis. We investigated whether the bone‐building effects of intermittent PTH require functional mTOR signaling. Mice were treated with daily PTH 1–34 (0, 10, 30, or 90 µg/kg) for 6 weeks in the presence or absence of rapamycin, a selective inhibitor of mTOR. We found that all PTH doses were effective in enhancing bone mass, whether rapamycin was present or not. Rapamycin had little to no effect on the anabolic response at low (10 µg) PTH doses, small effects in a minority of anabolic measures at moderate doses (30 µg), but the anabolic effects of high‐dose PTH (90 µg) were consistently and significantly suppressed by rapamycin (∼4–36% reduction). Serum levels of Trap5b, a marker of resorption, were significantly enhanced by rapamycin, but these effects were observed whether PTH was absent or present. Our data suggest that intermittent PTH, particularly at lower doses, is effective in building bone mass in the presence of rapamycin. However, the full anabolic effects of higher doses of PTH are significantly suppressed by rapamycin, suggesting that PTH might normally activate additional pathways (including mTOR) for its enhanced high‐dose anabolic effects. Clinical doses of intermittent PTH could be an effective treatment for maintaining or increasing bone mass among patients taking rapamycin analogs for unrelated health issues. J. Cell. Physiol. 221: 579–585, 2009.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2015

High-bone-mass causing mutant LRP5 receptors are resistant to endogenous inhibitors in vivo

Paul J. Niziolek; Bryan T. MacDonald; Rajendra Kedlaya; Minjie Zhang; Teresita Bellido; Xi He; Matthew L. Warman; Alexander G. Robling

Certain missense mutations affecting LRP5 cause high bone mass (HBM) in humans. Based on in vitro evidence, HBM LRP5 receptors are thought to exert their effects by providing resistance to binding/inhibition of secreted LRP5 inhibitors such as sclerostin (SOST) and Dickkopf homolog‐1 (DKK1). We previously reported the creation of two Lrp5 HBM knock‐in mouse models, in which the human p.A214V or p.G171V missense mutations were knocked into the endogenous Lrp5 locus. To determine whether HBM knock‐in mice are resistant to SOST‐ or DKK1‐induced osteopenia, we bred Lrp5 HBM mice with transgenic mice that overexpress human SOST in osteocytes (8kbDmp1‐SOST) or mouse DKK1 in osteoblasts and osteocytes (2.3kbCol1a1‐Dkk1). We observed that the 8kbDmp1‐SOST transgene significantly lowered whole‐body bone mineral density (BMD), bone mineral content (BMC), femoral and vertebral trabecular bone volume fraction (BV/TV), and periosteal bone‐formation rate (BFR) in wild‐type mice but not in mice with Lrp5 p.G171V and p.A214V alleles. The 2.3kbCol1a1‐Dkk1 transgene significantly lowered whole‐body BMD, BMC, and vertebral BV/TV in wild‐type mice and affected p.A214V mice more than p.G171V mice. These in vivo data support in vitro studies regarding the mechanism of HBM‐causing mutations, and imply that HBM LRP5 receptors differ in their relative sensitivity to inhibition by SOST and DKK1.


Calcified Tissue International | 2010

Mechanical stimulation and intermittent parathyroid hormone treatment induce disproportional osteogenic, geometric, and biomechanical effects in growing mouse bone

Maureen E. McAteer; Paul J. Niziolek; Shana N. Ellis; Daniel L. Alge; Alexander G. Robling


PMC | 2015

Missense Mutations in LRP5 Associated with High Bone Mass Protect the Mouse Skeleton from Disuse- and Ovariectomy-Induced Osteopenia

Paul J. Niziolek; Whitney A. Bullock; Matthew L. Warman; Alexander G. Robling

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Matthew L. Warman

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Yajun Cui

Case Western Reserve University

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Xi He

Boston Children's Hospital

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