Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5824325 Biochemical Pharmacology 2007 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
Strontium ranelate has several beneficial effects on bone and reduces the risk of vertebral and hip fractures in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis. We investigated whether Sr2+ acts via a cell surface calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) in HEK293 cells stably transfected with the bovine CaR (HEK-CaR) and rat primary osteoblasts (POBs) expressing the CaR endogenously. Elevating Cao2+ or Sr2+ concentration-dependently activated the CaR in HEK-CaR but not in non-transfected cells, but the potency of Sr2+ varied depending on the biological response tested. Sr2+ was less potent than Cao2+ in stimulating inositol phosphate accumulation and in increasing Cai2+, but was comparable to Cao2+ in stimulating ERK phosphorylation and a non-selective cation channel, suggesting that Ca2+ and Sr2+ have differential effects on specific cellular processes. With physiological concentrations of Cao2+, Sr2+-induced further CaR activation. Neither Sr2+ nor Cao2+ affected the four parameters just described in non-transfected cells. In POB, Sr2+ stimulated cellular proliferation. This effect was CaR-mediated, as transfecting the cells with a dominant negative bovine CaR significantly attenuated Cao2+-stimulated POB proliferation. Finally, Sr2+ significantly increased the mRNA levels of the immediate early genes, c-fos and egr-1, which are involved in POB proliferation, and this effect was attenuated by overexpressing the dominant negative CaR. In conclusion, Sr2+ is a full CaR agonist in HEK-CaR and POB, and, therefore, the anabolic effect of Sr2+ on bone in vivo could be mediated, in part, by the CaR.
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