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Sexual dimorphism of osteoclast reliance on mitochondrial oxidation of energy substrates in the mouse
Chao Song, … , Jared Rutter, Fanxin Long
Chao Song, … , Jared Rutter, Fanxin Long
Published November 2, 2023
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2023;8(24):e174293. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.174293.
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Research Article Bone biology

Sexual dimorphism of osteoclast reliance on mitochondrial oxidation of energy substrates in the mouse

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Abstract

Osteoclasts specialize in bone resorption and are critical for bone remodeling. Previous studies have shown that osteoclasts possess abundant mitochondria and derive most energy through oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). However, the energy substrates fueling OXPHOS in osteoclasts remain to be fully defined. Here, we showed that osteoclast differentiation was coupled with increased oxidation of glucose, glutamine, and oleate. Transcriptomic analyses with RNA sequencing revealed marked upregulation of genes participating in OXPHOS and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation, during osteoclast differentiation. Increased mitochondrial oxidation of long-chain fatty acids was required for osteoclast differentiation in vitro. However, blocking fatty acid oxidation in vivo, by deletion of carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1a (Cpt1a) in osteoclast progenitors, impaired osteoclast formation only in the female mice. The Cpt1a-deficient females were further protected from osteoclast activation by a high-fat diet. The males, on the contrary, exhibited normal bone resorption despite Cpt1a deletion, regardless of the dietary fat content. Moreover, concurrent deletion of mitochondrial pyruvate carrier 1 and Cpt1a, blocking mitochondrial oxidation of both glucose and fatty acids in the osteoclast lineage, failed to impede bone resorption in the males. The study therefore uncovers a female-specific dependence on mitochondrial oxidation of fatty acids and glucose in osteoclasts in vivo.

Authors

Chao Song, Arianna Valeri, Fangfang Song, Xing Ji, Xueyang Liao, Tyler Marmo, Rebecca Seeley, Jared Rutter, Fanxin Long

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Figure 5

Deletion of Cpt1a suppresses osteoclast formation and increases bone mass in female mice only.

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Deletion of Cpt1a suppresses osteoclast formation and increases bone mas...
(A) Representative μCT images of reconstructed trabecular bone of distal femurs. (B–E) Quantification of trabecular bone parameters by μCT. (F and G) Serum CTX-I and P1NP levels. (H) Representative TRAP staining images of distal femoral sections. Scale bar: 200 μm. (I and J) Quantification of osteoclast surface (I) and number (J) on distal femoral sections. (K–N) Quantification of trabecular bone parameters by μCT in male mice with indicated genotypes. (O and P) Serum CTX-I and P1NP levels of male mice with different genotypes. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, against Ctrl unless otherwise indicated, 1-way ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple comparisons test. Error bars: SD.

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