Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (Jun 2025)

The mechanosensitive adhesion G protein-coupled receptor 133 (GPR133/ADGRD1) enhances bone formation

  • Juliane Lehmann,
  • Hui Lin,
  • Zihao Zhang,
  • Maren Wiermann,
  • Albert M. Ricken,
  • Franziska Brinkmann,
  • Jana Brendler,
  • Christian Ullmann,
  • Luisa Bayer,
  • Sandra Berndt,
  • Anja Penk,
  • Nadine Winkler,
  • Franz Wolfgang Hirsch,
  • Thomas Fuhs,
  • Josef Käs,
  • Peng Xiao,
  • Torsten Schöneberg,
  • Martina Rauner,
  • Jin-Peng Sun,
  • Ines Liebscher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-025-02291-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Osteoporosis represents an increasing health and socioeconomic burden on aging societies. Current therapeutic options often come with potentially severe side effects or lack long-term efficacy, highlighting the urgent need for more effective treatments. Identifying novel drug targets requires a thorough understanding of their physiological roles. Genome-wide association studies in humans have linked gene variants of the adhesion G protein-coupled receptor 133 (GPR133/ADGRD1) to variations in bone mineral density and body height. In this study, we explore the impact of GPR133/ADGRD1 on osteoblast differentiation and function. Constitutive and osteoblast-specific knockouts of Gpr133/Adgrd1 in mice lead to reduced cortical bone mass and trabecularization in the femurs and vertebrae — features characteristic of osteoporosis. This osteopenic phenotype in receptor-deficient mice is caused by impaired osteoblast function, which, in turn, promotes increased osteoclast activity. At the molecular level, GPR133/ADGRD1 regulates osteoblast function and differentiation through a combined activation mechanism involving interaction with its endogenous ligand, protein tyrosine kinase 7 (PTK7), and mechanical forces. This is demonstrated in vitro through stretch assays and in vivo via a mechanical loading experiment. Further in vitro analysis shows that GPR133/ADGRD1-mediated osteoblast differentiation is driven by cAMP-dependent activation of the β-catenin signaling pathway. Activation of GPR133/ADGRD1 with the receptor-specific ligand AP-970/43482503 (AP503) enhances osteoblast function and differentiation, both in vitro and in vivo, significantly alleviating osteoporosis in a mouse ovariectomy model. These findings position GPR133/ADGRD1 as a promising therapeutic target for osteoporosis and other diseases characterized by reduced bone mass.