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. 2012 Jun;27(6):1289-97.
doi: 10.1002/jbmr.1575.

Osteoclast stimulatory transmembrane protein and dendritic cell–specific transmembrane protein cooperatively modulate cell–cell fusion to form osteoclasts and foreign body giant cells

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Osteoclast stimulatory transmembrane protein and dendritic cell–specific transmembrane protein cooperatively modulate cell–cell fusion to form osteoclasts and foreign body giant cells

Hiroya Miyamoto et al. J Bone Miner Res. 2012 Jun.
Free article

Abstract

Cell–cell fusion is a dynamic phenomenon promoting cytoskeletal reorganization and phenotypic changes. To characterize factors essential for fusion of macrophage lineage cells, we identified the multitransmembrane protein, osteoclast stimulatory transmembrane protein (OC-STAMP), and analyzed its function. OC-STAMP–deficient mice exhibited a complete lack of cell–cell fusion of osteoclasts and foreign body giant cells (FBGCs), both of which are macrophage-lineage multinuclear cells, although expression of dendritic cell specific transmembrane protein (DC-STAMP), which is also essential for osteoclast/FBGC fusion, was normal. Crossing OC-STAMP–overexpressing transgenic mice with OC-STAMP–deficient mice restored inhibited osteoclast and FBGC cell–cell fusion seen in OC-STAMP–deficient mice. Thus, fusogenic mechanisms in macrophage-lineage cells are regulated via OC-STAMP and DC-STAMP.

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