International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2022)

Erythropoietin Receptor (EPOR) Signaling in the Osteoclast Lineage Contributes to EPO-Induced Bone Loss in Mice

  • Zamzam Awida,
  • Sahar Hiram-Bab,
  • Almog Bachar,
  • Hussam Saed,
  • Dan Zyc,
  • Anton Gorodov,
  • Nathalie Ben-Califa,
  • Sewar Omari,
  • Jana Omar,
  • Liana Younis,
  • Jennifer Ana Iden,
  • Liad Graniewitz Visacovsky,
  • Ida Gluzman,
  • Tamar Liron,
  • Bitya Raphael-Mizrahi,
  • Albert Kolomansky,
  • Martina Rauner,
  • Ben Wielockx,
  • Yankel Gabet,
  • Drorit Neumann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms231912051
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 19
p. 12051

Abstract

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Erythropoietin (EPO) is a pleiotropic cytokine that classically drives erythropoiesis but can also induce bone loss by decreasing bone formation and increasing resorption. Deletion of the EPO receptor (EPOR) on osteoblasts or B cells partially mitigates the skeletal effects of EPO, thereby implicating a contribution by EPOR on other cell lineages. This study was designed to define the role of monocyte EPOR in EPO-mediated bone loss, by using two mouse lines with conditional deletion of EPOR in the monocytic lineage. Low-dose EPO attenuated the reduction in bone volume (BV/TV) in Cx3cr1Cre EPORf/f female mice (27.05%) compared to controls (39.26%), but the difference was not statistically significant. To validate these findings, we increased the EPO dose in LysMCre model mice, a model more commonly used to target preosteoclasts. There was a significant reduction in both the increase in the proportion of bone marrow preosteoclasts (CD115+) observed following high-dose EPO administration and the resulting bone loss in LysMCre EPORf/f female mice (44.46% reduction in BV/TV) as compared to controls (77.28%), without interference with the erythropoietic activity. Our data suggest that EPOR in the monocytic lineage is at least partially responsible for driving the effect of EPO on bone mass.

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