Ovariectomy selectively reduces the concentration of transforming growth factor beta in rat bone: implications for estrogen deficiency-associated bone loss
- PMID: 1465458
- PMCID: PMC50724
- DOI: 10.1073/pnas.89.24.12190
Ovariectomy selectively reduces the concentration of transforming growth factor beta in rat bone: implications for estrogen deficiency-associated bone loss
Abstract
Previous work showed that production of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) by osteoblast-like rat UMR 106 cells was increased by 17 beta-estradiol at physiological concentrations. To determine whether ovariectomy alters the concentration of TGF-beta in rat long bones, female Sprague-Dawley rats were either sham-operated (n = 19) or ovariectomized (n = 19), pair-fed a semisynthetic diet for 6 weeks, and sacrificed. Tibial and femoral diaphyses were removed and extracted by demineralization. Ovariectomy lowered serum estrogen; did not alter body weight, serum magnesium, or serum 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D; and produced only modest differences in serum calcium and phosphate concentrations. Hydroxyproline was higher and extractable protein was lower in bones from ovariectomized rats than in bones from sham-operated rats; calcium content did not differ between the two groups of animals. Ovariectomy lowered the concentration of TGF-beta in bone but did not change the concentration of insulin-like growth factors I or II compared with values in bone from control animals. The reduction of bone TGF-beta was evident 6 weeks after surgery but not at 3 weeks. Treatment of ovariectomized rats with estrogen eliminated the TGF-beta deficit. To determine whether 17 beta-estradiol increased TGF-beta production by normal bone cells, mouse osteoblasts were treated for 2 days with 17 beta-estradiol. The production of TGF-beta was increased almost 2-fold by 1 nM 17 beta-estradiol, and short-term treatment stimulated the intracellular accumulation of TGF-beta 1 mRNA. We conclude that ovariectomy reduces deposition of TGF-beta in rat bone and that diminished skeletal TGF-beta could play a role in the pathogenesis of bone loss, fractures, and microfractures that occur in estrogen-deficient states. Our results support the possibility that estrogen and bone TGF-beta may be necessary for normal maintenance of the skeleton in female rats.
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