Ion transporters involved in acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Ion transporters involved in acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts. / Henriksen, K.; Sorensen, M.G.; Jensen, V.K.; Nosjean, O.; Karsdal, M.A.; Dziegiel, Morten Hanefeld.

In: Calcified Tissue International, Vol. 83, No. 3, 2008, p. 230-242.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Henriksen, K, Sorensen, MG, Jensen, VK, Nosjean, O, Karsdal, MA & Dziegiel, MH 2008, 'Ion transporters involved in acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts', Calcified Tissue International, vol. 83, no. 3, pp. 230-242.

APA

Henriksen, K., Sorensen, M. G., Jensen, V. K., Nosjean, O., Karsdal, M. A., & Dziegiel, M. H. (2008). Ion transporters involved in acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts. Calcified Tissue International, 83(3), 230-242.

Vancouver

Henriksen K, Sorensen MG, Jensen VK, Nosjean O, Karsdal MA, Dziegiel MH. Ion transporters involved in acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts. Calcified Tissue International. 2008;83(3):230-242.

Author

Henriksen, K. ; Sorensen, M.G. ; Jensen, V.K. ; Nosjean, O. ; Karsdal, M.A. ; Dziegiel, Morten Hanefeld. / Ion transporters involved in acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts. In: Calcified Tissue International. 2008 ; Vol. 83, No. 3. pp. 230-242.

Bibtex

@article{1c6070f09b8d11debc73000ea68e967b,
title = "Ion transporters involved in acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts",
abstract = "Osteoclasts possess a large amount of ion transporters, which participate in bone resorption; of these, the vacuolar-adenosine trisphosphatase (V-ATPase) and the chloride-proton antiporter ClC-7 acidify the resorption lacuna. However, whether other ion transporters participate in this process is currently not well understood. We used a battery of ion channel inhibitors, human osteoclasts, and their subcellular compartments to perform an unbiased analysis of the importance of the different ion transporters for acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts. CD14(+) monocytes from human peripheral blood were isolated, and mature osteoclasts were generated using RANKL and M-CSF. The human osteoclasts were (1) used for acridine orange assays for evaluation of lysosomal acidification, (2) used for bone resorption assays, (3) used for generation of osteoclasts membranes for acid influx experiments, or (4) lysed in trizol for mRNA isolation for Affymetrix array analysis. Inhibitors targeted toward most of the ion transporters showed low potency in the acidification-based assays, although some inhibitors, such as carbonic anhydrase II and the sodium-hydrogen exchanger (NHE) inhibitors, reduced resorption potently. In contrast, inhibitors targeted at V-ATPase and ClC-7 potently inhibited both acidification and resorption, as expected. We here show evidence that acidification of the resorption lacuna is mainly mediated by V-ATPase and ClC-7. Furthermore, a group of other ion transporters, including carbonic anhydrase II, the NHEs, and potassium-chloride cotransporters, are all involved in resorption but do not seem to directly be involved in acidification of the lysosomes Udgivelsesdato: 2008/9",
author = "K. Henriksen and M.G. Sorensen and V.K. Jensen and O. Nosjean and M.A. Karsdal and Dziegiel, {Morten Hanefeld}",
year = "2008",
language = "English",
volume = "83",
pages = "230--242",
journal = "Calcified Tissue International",
issn = "0171-967X",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ion transporters involved in acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts

AU - Henriksen, K.

AU - Sorensen, M.G.

AU - Jensen, V.K.

AU - Nosjean, O.

AU - Karsdal, M.A.

AU - Dziegiel, Morten Hanefeld

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - Osteoclasts possess a large amount of ion transporters, which participate in bone resorption; of these, the vacuolar-adenosine trisphosphatase (V-ATPase) and the chloride-proton antiporter ClC-7 acidify the resorption lacuna. However, whether other ion transporters participate in this process is currently not well understood. We used a battery of ion channel inhibitors, human osteoclasts, and their subcellular compartments to perform an unbiased analysis of the importance of the different ion transporters for acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts. CD14(+) monocytes from human peripheral blood were isolated, and mature osteoclasts were generated using RANKL and M-CSF. The human osteoclasts were (1) used for acridine orange assays for evaluation of lysosomal acidification, (2) used for bone resorption assays, (3) used for generation of osteoclasts membranes for acid influx experiments, or (4) lysed in trizol for mRNA isolation for Affymetrix array analysis. Inhibitors targeted toward most of the ion transporters showed low potency in the acidification-based assays, although some inhibitors, such as carbonic anhydrase II and the sodium-hydrogen exchanger (NHE) inhibitors, reduced resorption potently. In contrast, inhibitors targeted at V-ATPase and ClC-7 potently inhibited both acidification and resorption, as expected. We here show evidence that acidification of the resorption lacuna is mainly mediated by V-ATPase and ClC-7. Furthermore, a group of other ion transporters, including carbonic anhydrase II, the NHEs, and potassium-chloride cotransporters, are all involved in resorption but do not seem to directly be involved in acidification of the lysosomes Udgivelsesdato: 2008/9

AB - Osteoclasts possess a large amount of ion transporters, which participate in bone resorption; of these, the vacuolar-adenosine trisphosphatase (V-ATPase) and the chloride-proton antiporter ClC-7 acidify the resorption lacuna. However, whether other ion transporters participate in this process is currently not well understood. We used a battery of ion channel inhibitors, human osteoclasts, and their subcellular compartments to perform an unbiased analysis of the importance of the different ion transporters for acidification of the resorption lacuna in osteoclasts. CD14(+) monocytes from human peripheral blood were isolated, and mature osteoclasts were generated using RANKL and M-CSF. The human osteoclasts were (1) used for acridine orange assays for evaluation of lysosomal acidification, (2) used for bone resorption assays, (3) used for generation of osteoclasts membranes for acid influx experiments, or (4) lysed in trizol for mRNA isolation for Affymetrix array analysis. Inhibitors targeted toward most of the ion transporters showed low potency in the acidification-based assays, although some inhibitors, such as carbonic anhydrase II and the sodium-hydrogen exchanger (NHE) inhibitors, reduced resorption potently. In contrast, inhibitors targeted at V-ATPase and ClC-7 potently inhibited both acidification and resorption, as expected. We here show evidence that acidification of the resorption lacuna is mainly mediated by V-ATPase and ClC-7. Furthermore, a group of other ion transporters, including carbonic anhydrase II, the NHEs, and potassium-chloride cotransporters, are all involved in resorption but do not seem to directly be involved in acidification of the lysosomes Udgivelsesdato: 2008/9

M3 - Journal article

VL - 83

SP - 230

EP - 242

JO - Calcified Tissue International

JF - Calcified Tissue International

SN - 0171-967X

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 14248280