Xiaolin Tu
Indiana University
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Featured researches published by Xiaolin Tu.
Bone | 2012
Xiaolin Tu; Yumie Rhee; Keith W. Condon; Nicoletta Bivi; Matthew R. Allen; Denise Dwyer; Marina Stolina; Charles H. Turner; Alexander G. Robling; Lilian I. Plotkin; Teresita Bellido
Sclerostin, the Wnt signaling antagonist encoded by the Sost gene, is secreted by osteocytes and inhibits bone formation by osteoblasts. Mechanical stimulation reduces sclerostin expression, suggesting that osteocytes might coordinate the osteogenic response to mechanical force by locally unleashing Wnt signaling. To investigate whether sclerostin downregulation is a pre-requisite for load-induced bone formation, we conducted experiments in transgenic mice (TG) engineered to maintain high levels of SOST expression during mechanical loading. This was accomplished by introducing a human SOST transgene driven by the 8 kb fragment of the DMP1 promoter that also provided osteocyte specificity of the transgene. Right ulnae were subjected to in vivo cyclic axial loading at equivalent strains for 1 min/day at 2 Hz; left ulnae served as internal controls. Endogenous murine Sost mRNA expression measured 24 h after 1 loading bout was decreased by about 50% in TG and wild type (WT) littermates. In contrast, human SOST, only expressed in TG mice, remained high after loading. Mice were loaded on 3 consecutive days and bone formation was quantified 16 days after initiation of loading. Periosteal bone formation in control ulnae was similar in WT and TG mice. Loading induced the expected strain-dependent increase in bone formation in WT mice, resulting from increases in both mineralizing surface (MS/BS) and mineral apposition rate (MAR). In contrast, load-induced bone formation was reduced by 70-85% in TG mice, due to lower MS/BS and complete inhibition of MAR. Moreover, Wnt target gene expression induced by loading in WT mice was absent in TG mice. Thus, downregulation of Sost/sclerostin in osteocytes is an obligatory step in the mechanotransduction cascade that activates Wnt signaling and directs osteogenesis to where bone is structurally needed.
Bone | 2015
Amy Y. Sato; Xiaolin Tu; Kevin McAndrews; Lilian I. Plotkin; Teresita Bellido
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress is associated with increased reactive oxygen species (ROS), results from accumulation of misfolded/unfolded proteins, and can trigger apoptosis. ER stress is alleviated by phosphorylation of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α (eIF2α), which inhibits protein translation allowing the ER to recover, thus promoting cell viability. We investigated whether osteoblastic cell apoptosis induced by glucocorticoids (GCs) is due to induction of ROS/ER stress and whether inhibition of eIF2α dephosphorylation promotes survival opposing the deleterious effects of GC in vitro and in vivo. Apoptosis of osteocytic MLO-Y4 and osteoblastic OB-6 cells induced by dexamethasone was abolished by ROS inhibitors. Like GC, the ER stress inducing agents brefeldin A and tunicamycin induced osteoblastic cell apoptosis. Salubrinal or guanabenz, specific inhibitors of eIF2α dephosphorylation, blocked apoptosis induced by either GC or ER stress inducers. Moreover, GC markedly decreased mineralization in OB-6 cells or primary osteoblasts; and salubrinal or guanabenz increased mineralization and prevented the inhibitory effect of GC. Furthermore, salubrinal (1 mg/kg/day) abolished osteoblast and osteocyte apoptosis in cancellous and cortical bone and partially prevented the loss of BMD at all sites and the decreased vertebral cancellous bone formation induced by treatment with prednisolone for 28 days (1.4 mg/kg/day). We conclude that part of the pro-apoptotic actions of GC on osteoblastic cells is mediated through ER stress, and that inhibition of eIF2α dephosphorylation protects from GC-induced apoptosis of osteoblasts and osteocytes in vitro and in vivo and from the deleterious effects of GC on the skeleton.
Endocrinology | 2014
Abdullah N. Ben-awadh; Jesus Delgado-Calle; Xiaolin Tu; Kali Kuhlenschmidt; Matthew R. Allen; Lilian I. Plotkin; Teresita Bellido
PTH upregulates the expression of the receptor activator of nuclear factor κB ligand (Rankl) in cells of the osteoblastic lineage, but the precise differentiation stage of the PTH target cell responsible for RANKL-mediated stimulation of bone resorption remains undefined. We report that constitutive activation of PTH receptor signaling only in osteocytes in transgenic mice (DMP1-caPTHR1) was sufficient to increase Rankl expression and bone resorption. Resorption in DMP1-caPTHR1 mice crossed with mice lacking the distal control region regulated by PTH in the Rankl gene (DCR(-/-)) was similar to DMP1-caPTHR1 mice at 1 month of age, but progressively declined to reach values undistinguishable from wild-type (WT) mice at 5 months of age. Moreover, DMP1-caPTHR1 mice exhibited low tissue material density and increased serum alkaline phosphatase activity at 5 month of age, and these indices of high remodeling were partially and totally corrected in compound DMP1-caPTHR1;DCR(-/-) male mice, and less affected in female mice. Rankl expression in bones from DMP1-caPTHR1 mice was elevated at both 1 and 5 months of age, whereas it was high, similar to DMP1-caPTHR1 mice at 1 month, but low, similar to WT levels at 5 months in compound mice. Moreover, PTH increased Rankl and decreased Sost and Opg expression in ex vivo bone organ cultures established from WT mice, but only regulated Sost and Opg expression in cultures from DCR(-/-) mice. PTH also increased RANKL expression in osteocyte-containing primary cultures of calvarial cells, in isolated murine osteocytes, and in WT but not in DCR(-/-) osteocyte-enriched bones. Thus, PTH upregulates Rankl expression in osteocytes in vitro, ex vivo and in vivo, and resorption induced by PTH receptor signaling in the adult skeleton requires direct regulation of the Rankl gene in osteocytes.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2017
Jesus Delgado-Calle; Xiaolin Tu; Rafael Pacheco-Costa; Kevin McAndrews; Rachel Edwards; Gretel G. Pellegrini; Kali Kuhlenschmidt; Naomie Olivos; Alexander Robling; Munro Peacock; Lilian I. Plotkin; Teresita Bellido
Osteocytes integrate the responses of bone to mechanical and hormonal stimuli by poorly understood mechanisms. We report here that mice with conditional deletion of the parathyroid hormone (PTH) receptor 1 (Pth1r) in dentin matrix protein 1 (DMP1)‐8kb–expressing cells (cKO) exhibit a modest decrease in bone resorption leading to a mild increase in cancellous bone without changes in cortical bone. However, bone resorption in response to endogenous chronic elevation of PTH in growing or adult cKO mice induced by a low calcium diet remained intact, because the increased bone remodeling and bone loss was indistinguishable from that exhibited by control littermates. In contrast, the bone gain and increased bone formation in cancellous and cortical bone induced by daily injections of PTH and the periosteal bone apposition induced by axial ulna loading were markedly reduced in cKO mice compared to controls. Remarkably, however, wild‐type (WT) control littermates and transgenic mice overexpressing SOST injected daily with PTH exhibit similar activation of Wnt/β‐catenin signaling, increased bone formation, and cancellous and cortical bone gain. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that Pth1r in DMP1‐8kb–expressing cells is required to maintain basal levels of bone resorption but is dispensable for the catabolic action of chronic PTH elevation; and it is essential for the anabolic actions of daily PTH injections and mechanical loading. However, downregulation of Sost/sclerostin, previously shown to be required for bone anabolism induced by mechanical loading, is not required for PTH‐induced bone gain, showing that other mechanisms downstream of the Pth1r in DMP1‐8kb–expressing cells are responsible for the hormonal effect.
Cell Stem Cell | 2014
Lin Wang; Huajia Zhang; Sonia Rodriguez; Liyun Cao; Jonathan Parish; Christen Mumaw; Amy Zollman; Malgorzata M. Kamoka; Jian Mu; Danny Z. Chen; Edward F. Srour; Brahmananda R. Chitteti; Harm HogenEsch; Xiaolin Tu; Teresita Bellido; H. Scott Boswell; Taghi Manshouri; Srdan Verstovsek; Mervin C. Yoder; Reuben Kapur; Angelo A. Cardoso; Nadia Carlesso
PMC | 2015
Amy Y. Sato; Xiaolin Tu; Kevin McAndrews; Lilian I. Plotkin; Teresita Bellido
PMC | 2015
Xiaolin Tu; Jesus Delgado-Calle; Keith W. Condon; Marta Maycas; Huajia Zhang; Nadia Carlesso; Makoto M. Taketo; David B. Burr; Lilian I. Plotkin; Teresita Bellido
Blood | 2015
Benjamin J. Frisch; Alexandra N. Goodman; Rhonda J. Staversky; Olga Bromberg; Xiaolin Tu; Teresita Bellido; Laura M. Calvi
PMC | 2014
Lin Wang; Huajia Zhang; Sonia Rodriguez; Liyun Cao; Jonathan Parish; Christen Mumaw; Amy Zollman; Gosia Kamocka; Jian Mu; Danny Z. Chen; Edward F. Srour; Brahmananda R. Chitteti; Harm HogenEsch; Xiaolin Tu; Teresita Bellido; Scott Boswell; Taghi Manshouri; Srdan Verstovsek; Mervin C. Yoder; Reuben Kapur; Angelo A. Cardoso; Nadia Carlesso
PMC | 2014
Abdullah N. Ben-awadh; Jesus Delgado-Calle; Xiaolin Tu; Kali Kuhlenschmidt; Matthew R. Allen; Lilian I. Plotkin; Teresita Bellido