Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8292250 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The present study determines the role of the Gab1 in hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-induced death of human osteoblasts. We show that Gab1 is required for H2O2-induced Akt activation to promote osteoblast survival. In OB-6 human osteoblasts, Gab1 silencing (by targeted-shRNA) or complete knockout (by CRISPR-Cas9 KO plasmid) largely attenuated Akt activation by H2O2. Gab1-depleted OB-6â¯cells were more vulnerable to H2O2. Conversely, forced over-expression of Gab1 by an adenovirus vector increased Akt activation to protect OB-6â¯cells from H2O2. Significantly, the anti-sense of microRNA-29a (“antagomiR-29a”) induced Gab1 expression to facilitate H2O2-induced Akt activation, which protected OB-6â¯cells from apoptosis. AntagomiR-29a was however ineffective in Gab1-deficient and Akt-inhibited OB-6â¯cells. Forced over-expression of miR-29a induced Gab1 downregulation to inhibit H2O2-induced Akt activation, causing enhanced OB-6â¯cell death. miR-29a-induced actions were abolished by an adenovirus constitutively-active Akt1 (Ad-caAkt1) in OB-6â¯cells. Together, microRNA-29a inhibition induces Gab1 upregulation and Akt activation to protect OB-6 osteoblasts from H2O2.
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Authors
Jian-wei Ruan, Chen Yao, Jin-yu Bai, Xiao-zhong Zhou,