Kynurenine suppresses osteoblastic cell energetics in vitro and osteoblast numbers in vivo

Aging is a progressive process associated with declining tissue function over time. Kynurenine, an oxidized metabolite of the essential amino acid tryptophan that increases in abundance with age, drives cellular processes of aging and dysfunction in many tissues, and recent work has focused on under...

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Veröffentlicht in:Experimental gerontology 2020-02, Vol.130, p.110818-110818, Article 110818
Hauptverfasser: Pierce, Jessica L., Roberts, Rachel L., Yu, Kanglun, Kendall, Riley K., Kaiser, Helen, Davis, Colleen, Johnson, Maribeth H., Hill, William D., Isales, Carlos M., Bollag, Wendy B., Hamrick, Mark W., McGee-Lawrence, Meghan E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aging is a progressive process associated with declining tissue function over time. Kynurenine, an oxidized metabolite of the essential amino acid tryptophan that increases in abundance with age, drives cellular processes of aging and dysfunction in many tissues, and recent work has focused on understanding the pathways involved in the harmful effects of kynurenine on bone. In this study, we sought to investigate the effects of controlled kynurenine administration on osteoblast bioenergetics, in vivo osteoblast abundance, and marrow fat accumulation. Additionally, as an extension of earlier studies with dietary administration of kynurenine, we investigated the effects of kynurenine on Hdac3 and NCoR1 expression and enzymatic deacetylase activity as potential mechanistic contributors to the effects of kynurenine on osteoblasts. Kynurenine administration suppressed cellular metabolism in osteoblasts at least in part through impaired mitochondrial respiration, and suppressed osteoblastic numbers in vivo with no concurrent effects on marrow adiposity. Deleterious effects of kynurenine treatment on osteoblasts were more pronounced in female models as compared to males. However, kynurenine treatment did not inhibit Hdac3's enzymatic deacetylase activity nor its repression of downstream glucocorticoid signaling. As such, future work will be necessary to determine the mechanisms by which increased kynurenine contributes to aging bone bioenergetics. The current study provides novel further support for the idea that kynurenine contributes to impaired osteoblastic function, and suggests that impaired matrix production by kynurenine-affected osteoblasts is attributed in part to impaired osteoblastic bioenergetics. As circulating kynurenine levels in increase with age, and human bone density inversely correlates with the serum kynurenine to tryptophan ratio, these mechanisms may have important relevance in the etiology and pathogenesis of osteoporosis in humans. •Kynurenine, an oxidized metabolite of tryptophan, increases in abundance with age.•Previous work showed that kynurenine treatment impaired osteoblastic bone formation.•In this study, kynurenine decreased cellular metabolism in osteoblasts in vitro.•Kynurenine treatment also decreased osteoblast numbers in vivo.•The harmful effects of kynurenine were more pronounced in females than males.
ISSN:0531-5565
1873-6815
DOI:10.1016/j.exger.2019.110818