Cultured Human Periosteum-Derived Cells Can Differentiate into Osteoblasts in a Perioxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Gamma-Mediated Fashion via Bone Morphogenetic Protein signaling
Abstract
The differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells towards an osteoblastic fate depends on numerous
signaling pathways, including activation of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling
components. Commitment to osteogenesis is associated with activation of osteoblast-related
signal transduction, whereas inactivation of this signal transduction favors adipogenesis. BMP
signaling also has a critical role in the processes by which mesenchymal stem cells undergo
commitment to the adipocyte lineage. In our previous study, we demonstrated that an agonist of
the perioxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ), a master regulator of adipocyte
differentiation, stimulates osteoblastic differentiation of cultured human periosteum-derived cells.
In this study, we used dorsomorphin, a selective small molecule inhibitor of BMP signaling, to
investigate whether BMP signaling is involved in the positive effects of PPARγ agonists on
osteogenic phenotypes of cultured human periosteum-derived cells. Both histochemical detection
and bioactivity of ALP were clearly increased in the periosteum-derived cells treated with the
PPARγ agonist at day 10 of culture. Treatment with the PPARγ agonist also caused an increase in
alizarin red S staining and calcium content in the periosteum-derived osteoblasts at 2 and 3 weeks
of culture. In contrast, dorsomorphin markedly decreased ALP activity, alizarin red S staining and
calcium content in both the cells treated with PPARγ agonist and the cells cultured in osteogenic
induction media without PPARγ agonist during the culture period. In addition, the PPARγ agonist
clearly increased osteogenic differentiation medium-induced BMP-2 upregulation in the
periosteum-derived osteoblastic cells at 2 weeks of culture as determined by quantitative reverse
transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), immunoblotting, and immunocytochemical
analyses. Although further study will be needed to clarify the mechanisms of PPARγ-regulated
osteogenesis, our results suggest that the positive effects of a PPARγ agonist on the osteogenic
phenotypes of cultured human periosteum-derived cells seem to be dependent on BMP signaling