Riku Kiviranta
Turku University Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Riku Kiviranta.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013
Sutada Lotinun; Riku Kiviranta; Takuma Matsubara; Jorge A. Alzate; Lynn Neff; Anja Lüth; Ilpo Koskivirta; Burkhard Kleuser; Jean Vacher; Eero Vuorio; William C. Horne; Roland Baron
Cathepsin K (CTSK) is secreted by osteoclasts to degrade collagen and other matrix proteins during bone resorption. Global deletion of Ctsk in mice decreases bone resorption, leading to osteopetrosis, but also increases the bone formation rate (BFR). To understand how Ctsk deletion increases the BFR, we generated osteoclast- and osteoblast-targeted Ctsk knockout mice using floxed Ctsk alleles. Targeted ablation of Ctsk in hematopoietic cells, or specifically in osteoclasts and cells of the monocyte-osteoclast lineage, resulted in increased bone volume and BFR as well as osteoclast and osteoblast numbers. In contrast, targeted deletion of Ctsk in osteoblasts had no effect on bone resorption or BFR, demonstrating that the increased BFR is osteoclast dependent. Deletion of Ctsk in osteoclasts increased their sphingosine kinase 1 (Sphk1) expression. Conditioned media from Ctsk-deficient osteoclasts, which contained elevated levels of sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), increased alkaline phosphatase and mineralized nodules in osteoblast cultures. An S1P1,3 receptor antagonist inhibited these responses. Osteoblasts derived from mice with Ctsk-deficient osteoclasts had an increased RANKL/OPG ratio, providing a positive feedback loop that increased the number of osteoclasts. Our data provide genetic evidence that deletion of CTSK in osteoclasts enhances bone formation in vivo by increasing the generation of osteoclast-derived S1P.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013
Christine M. Laine; Kyu Sang Joeng; Philippe M. Campeau; Riku Kiviranta; Kati Tarkkonen; Monica Grover; James T. Lu; Minna Pekkinen; Maija Wessman; Terhi J. Heino; Vappu Nieminen-Pihala; Mira Aronen; Tero Laine; Heikki Kröger; William G. Cole; Anna-Elina Lehesjoki; Lisette Nevarez; Deborah Krakow; Cynthia J. Curry; Daniel H. Cohn; Richard A. Gibbs; Brendan Lee; Outi Mäkitie
This report identifies human skeletal diseases associated with mutations in WNT1. In 10 family members with dominantly inherited, early-onset osteoporosis, we identified a heterozygous missense mutation in WNT1, c.652T→G (p.Cys218Gly). In a separate family with 2 siblings affected by recessive osteogenesis imperfecta, we identified a homozygous nonsense mutation, c.884C→A, p.Ser295*. In vitro, aberrant forms of the WNT1 protein showed impaired capacity to induce canonical WNT signaling, their target genes, and mineralization. In mice, Wnt1 was clearly expressed in bone marrow, especially in B-cell lineage and hematopoietic progenitors; lineage tracing identified the expression of the gene in a subset of osteocytes, suggesting the presence of altered cross-talk in WNT signaling between the hematopoietic and osteoblastic lineage cells in these diseases.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2001
Riku Kiviranta; Jukka Morko; Hannele Uusitalo; Hannu T. Aro; Eero Vuorio; Juho Rantakokko
This study is based on a hypothesis that overexpression of an osteoclast enzyme, cathepsin K, causes an imbalance in bone remodeling toward bone loss. The hypothesis was tested in transgenic (TG) mice harboring additional copies of the murine cathepsin K gene (Ctsk) identifiable by a silent mutation engineered into the construct. For this study, three TG mouse lines harboring 3‐25 copies of the transgene were selected. Tissue specificity of transgene expression was determined by Northern analysis, which revealed up to 6‐fold increases in the levels of cathepsin K messenger RNA (mRNA) in calvarial and long bone samples of the three TG lines. No changes were seen in the mRNA levels of other osteoclast enzymes, indicating that the increase in cathepsin K mRNA was not a reflection of activation of all osteoclast enzymes. Immunohistochemistry confirmed that cathepsin K expression in the TG mice was confined to osteoclasts and chondroclasts. Histomorphometry revealed a significantly decreased trabecular bone volume (BV), but, surprisingly, also a marked increase in the number of osteoblasts, the rate of bone turnover, and the amount of mineralizing surface (MS). However, monitoring of bone density in the proximal tibias of the TG mice with peripheral quantitative computed tomography (pQCT) failed to reveal statistically significant changes in bone density. Similarly, no statistically significant alterations were observed in biomechanical testing at the age of 7 months. The increases in parameters of bone formation triggered by increased cathepsin K expression is an example of the tight coupling of bone resorption and formation during the bone‐remodeling cycle.
PLOS Biology | 2012
Sona Kang; Peter Åkerblad; Riku Kiviranta; Rana K. Gupta; Shingo Kajimura; Michael J. Griffin; Jie Min; Roland Baron; Evan D. Rosen
Zfp521 is a novel antiadipogenic transcription factor that helps to determine the identity of a mesenchymal cell as bone or fat.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2010
Eric Hesse; Hiroaki Saito; Riku Kiviranta; Diego Correa; Kei Yamana; Lynn Neff; Daniel Toben; Georg N. Duda; Azeddine Atfi; Valérie Geoffroy; William C. Horne; Roland Baron
Zfp521 regulates osteoblast development during lineage commitment and osteoblast maturation by suppressing Runx2 transcriptional activity.
Developmental Cell | 2010
Diego Correa; Eric Hesse; Dutmanee Seriwatanachai; Riku Kiviranta; Hiroaki Saito; Kei Yamana; Lynn Neff; Azeddine Atfi; Lucie Coillard; Despina Sitara; Yukiko Maeda; Søren Warming; Nancy A. Jenkins; Neal G. Copeland; William C. Horne; Beate Lanske; Roland Baron
In the growth plate, the interplay between parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) and Indian hedgehog (Ihh) signaling tightly regulates chondrocyte proliferation and differentiation during longitudinal bone growth. We found that PTHrP increases the expression of Zfp521, a zinc finger transcriptional coregulator, in prehypertrophic chondrocytes. Mice with chondrocyte-targeted deletion of Zfp521 resembled PTHrP(-/-) and chondrocyte-specific PTHR1(-/-) mice, with decreased chondrocyte proliferation, early hypertrophic transition, and reduced growth plate thickness. Deleting Zfp521 increased expression of Runx2 and Runx2 target genes, and decreased Cyclin D1 and Bcl-2 expression while increasing Caspase-3 activation and apoptosis. Zfp521 associated with Runx2 in chondrocytes, antagonizing its activity via an HDAC4-dependent mechanism. PTHrP failed to upregulate Cyclin D1 and to antagonize Runx2, Ihh, and collagen X expression when Zfp521 was absent. Thus, Zfp521 is an important PTHrP target gene that regulates growth plate chondrocyte proliferation and differentiation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Ilpo Koskivirta; Zamaneh Kassiri; Otto Rahkonen; Riku Kiviranta; Gavin Y. Oudit; Trevor D. McKee; Ville Kytö; Antti Saraste; Eero Jokinen; Peter Liu; Eero Vuorio; Rama Khokha
Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 4 (TIMP4) is expressed highly in heart and found dysregulated in human cardiovascular diseases. It controls extracellular matrix remodeling by inhibiting matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and is implicated in processes including cell proliferation, apoptosis, and angiogenesis. Timp4-deficient mice (Timp4−/−) were generated to assess TIMP4 function in normal development and in models of heart disease. We deleted exons 1–3 of the Timp4 gene by homologous recombination. Timp4−/− mice are born healthy, develop normally, and produce litters of normal size and gender distribution. These mice show no compensation by overexpression of Timp1, Timp2, or Timp3 in the heart. Following cardiac pressure overload by aortic banding, Timp4−/− mice have comparable survival rate, cardiac histology, and cardiac function to controls. In this case, Timp4 deficiency is compensated by increased cardiac Timp2 expression. Strikingly, the induction of myocardial infarction (MI) leads to significantly increased mortality in Timp4−/− mice primarily due to left ventricular rupture. The post-MI mortality of Timp4−/− mice is reduced by administration of a synthetic MMP inhibitor. Furthermore, combining the genetic deletion of Mmp2 also rescues the higher post-MI mortality of Timp4−/− mice. Finally, Timp4−/− mice suffer reduced cardiac function at 20 months of age. Timp4 is not essential for murine development, although its loss moderately compromises cardiac function with aging. Timp4−/− mice are more susceptible to MI but not to pressure overload, and TIMP4 functions in its capacity as a metalloproteinase inhibitor after myocardial infarction.
Bone | 2009
Meilin Wu; Eric Hesse; Frederic Morvan; Jian-Ping Zhang; Diego Correa; Glenn C. Rowe; Riku Kiviranta; Lynn Neff; William M. Philbrick; William C. Horne; Roland Baron
Zfp521, a 30 C2H2 Kruppel-like zinc finger protein, is expressed at high levels at the periphery of early mesenchymal condensations prefiguring skeletal elements and in all developing bones in the perichondrium and periosteum, in osteoblast precursors and osteocytes, and in chondroblast precursors and growth plate prehypertrophic chondrocytes. Zfp521 expression in cultured mesenchymal cells is decreased by BMP-2 and increased by PTHrP, which promote and antagonize osteoblast differentiation, respectively. In vitro, Zfp521 overexpression reduces the expression of several downstream osteoblast marker genes and antagonizes osteoblast differentiation. Zfp521 binds Runx2 and represses its transcriptional activity, and Runx2 dose-dependently rescues Zfp521s inhibition of osteoblast differentiation. In contrast, osteocalcin promoter-targeted overexpression of Zfp521 in osteoblasts in vivo results in increased bone formation and bone mass. We propose that Zfp521 regulates the rate of osteoblast differentiation and bone formation during development and in the mature skeleton, in part by antagonizing Runx2.
Respiratory Research | 2008
Mrigank Srivastava; Kathrin Steinwede; Riku Kiviranta; Jukka Morko; Heinz-Gerd Hoymann; Florian Länger; Frank Bühling; Tobias Welte; Ulrich A. Maus
BackgroundLung fibrosis is a devastating pulmonary disorder characterized by alveolar epithelial injury, extracellular matrix deposition and scar tissue formation. Due to its potent collagenolytic activity, cathepsin K, a lysosomal cysteine protease is an interesting target molecule with therapeutic potential to attenuate bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis in mice. We here tested the hypothesis that over-expression of cathepsin K in the lungs of mice is protective in bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis.MethodsWild-type and cathepsin K overexpressing (cathepsin K transgenic; cath K tg) mice were challenged intratracheally with bleomycin and sacrificed at 1, 2, 3 and 4 weeks post-treatment followed by determination of lung fibrosis by estimating lung collagen content, lung histopathology, leukocytic infiltrates and lung function. In addition, changes in cathepsin K protein levels in the lung were determined by immunohistochemistry, real time RT-PCR and western blotting.ResultsCathepsin K protein levels were strongly increased in alveolar macrophages and lung parenchymal tissue of mock-treated cathepsin K transgenic (cath K tg) mice relative to wild-type mice and further increased particularly in cath K tg but also wild-type mice in response to bleomycin. Moreover, cath K tg mice responded with a lower collagen deposition in their lungs, which was accompanied by a significantly lower lung resistance (RL) compared to bleomycin-treated wild-type mice. In addition, cath K tg mice responded with a lower degree of lung fibrosis than wild-type mice, a process that was found to be independent of inflammatory leukocyte mobilization in response to bleomycin challenge.ConclusionOver-expression of cathepsin K reduced lung collagen deposition and improved lung function parameters in the lungs of transgenic mice, thereby providing at least partial protection against bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis.
Annals of Medicine | 1998
Thorsten Schinke; Marc D. McKee; Riku Kiviranta; Gerard Karsenty
Calcification of extracellular matrix (ECM) can be either physiological or pathological. Physiological calcification (or mineralization) of ECM is restricted to bones, teeth and, to a lesser extent, growth plate cartilages. Pathological calcification appears often in the ECM of arteries where it is a frequent complication of atherosclerosis. However, calcification of the ECM of arteries is not restricted to atherosclerosis. Indeed, human diseases have been described that are characterized by calcification of the aortic media in the absence of any atherosclerotic lesions. The existence of these rare diseases, along with several mouse models recently generated and discussed below, indicates that the formation of atherosclerotic lesions and the calcification of the artery ECM are controlled by different genetic pathways. This emerging knowledge has implications for our understanding of ECM calcification beyond atherosclerosis.