Cell Death and Disease (Dec 2023)

Atypical cell death and insufficient matrix organization in long-bone growth plates from Tric-b-knockout mice

  • Atsuhiko Ichimura,
  • Yuu Miyazaki,
  • Hiroki Nagatomo,
  • Takaaki Kawabe,
  • Nobuhisa Nakajima,
  • Ga Eun Kim,
  • Masato Tomizawa,
  • Naoki Okamoto,
  • Shinji Komazaki,
  • Sho Kakizawa,
  • Miyuki Nishi,
  • Hiroshi Takeshima

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41419-023-06285-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 12
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract TRIC-A and TRIC-B proteins form homotrimeric cation-permeable channels in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and nuclear membranes and are thought to contribute to counterionic flux coupled with store Ca2+ release in various cell types. Serious mutations in the TRIC-B (also referred to as TMEM38B) locus cause autosomal recessive osteogenesis imperfecta (OI), which is characterized by insufficient bone mineralization. We have reported that Tric-b-knockout mice can be used as an OI model; Tric-b deficiency deranges ER Ca2+ handling and thus reduces extracellular matrix (ECM) synthesis in osteoblasts, leading to poor mineralization. Here we report irregular cell death and insufficient ECM in long-bone growth plates from Tric-b-knockout embryos. In the knockout growth plate chondrocytes, excess pro-collagen fibers were occasionally accumulated in severely dilated ER elements. Of the major ER stress pathways, activated PERK/eIF2α (PKR-like ER kinase/ eukaryotic initiation factor 2α) signaling seemed to inordinately alter gene expression to induce apoptosis-related proteins including CHOP (CCAAT/enhancer binding protein homologous protein) and caspase 12 in the knockout chondrocytes. Ca2+ imaging detected aberrant Ca2+ handling in the knockout chondrocytes; ER Ca2+ release was impaired, while cytoplasmic Ca2+ level was elevated. Our observations suggest that Tric-b deficiency directs growth plate chondrocytes to pro-apoptotic states by compromising cellular Ca2+-handling and exacerbating ER stress response, leading to impaired ECM synthesis and accidental cell death.