Artículos de revistas
Enoxacin Directly Inhibits Osteoclastogenesis without Inducing Apoptosis
Fecha
2012Registro en:
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, BETHESDA, v. 287, n. 21, supl. 1, Part 1, pp. 17894-17904, MAY 18, 2012
0021-9258
10.1074/jbc.M111.280511
Autor
Toro, Edgardo J.
Zuo, Jian
Ostrov, David A.
Catalfamo, Dana
Corrêa, Vivian Bradaschia
Chavez, Victor Elias Arana
Caridad, Aliana R.
Neubert, John K.
Wronski, Thomas J.
Wallet, Shannon M.
Holliday, L. Shannon
Institución
Resumen
Enoxacin has been identified as a small molecule inhibitor of binding between the B2-subunit of vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) and microfilaments. It inhibits bone resorption by calcitriol-stimulated mouse marrow cultures. We hypothesized that enoxacin acts directly and specifically on osteoclasts by disrupting the interaction between plasma membrane-directed V-ATPases, which contain the osteoclast-selective a3-subunit of V-ATPase, and microfilaments. Consistent with this hypothesis, enoxacin dose-dependently reduced the number of multinuclear cells expressing tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) activity produced by RANK-L-stimulated osteoclast precursors. Enoxacin (50 mu M) did not induce apoptosis as measured by TUNEL and caspase-3 assays. V-ATPases containing the a3-subunit, but not the "housekeeping" a1-subunit, were isolated bound to actin. Treatment with enoxacin reduced the association of V-ATPase subunits with the detergent-insoluble cytoskeleton. Quantitative PCR revealed that enoxacin triggered significant reductions in several osteoclast-selective mRNAs, but levels of various osteoclast proteins were not reduced, as determined by quantitative immunoblots, even when their mRNA levels were reduced. Immunoblots demonstrated that proteolytic processing of TRAP5b and the cytoskeletal protein L-plastin was altered in cells treated with 50 mu M enoxacin. Flow cytometry revealed that enoxacin treatment favored the expression of high levels of DC-STAMP on the surface of osteoclasts. Our data show that enoxacin directly inhibits osteoclast formation without affecting cell viability by a novel mechanism that involves changes in post-translational processing and trafficking of several proteins with known roles in osteoclast function. We propose that these effects are downstream to blocking the binding interaction between a3-containing V-ATPases and microfilaments.