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Apoptosis of Human Primary Osteoclasts Treated with Molecules Targeting Nuclear Factor-κB
Roberta Piva a , Letizia Penolazzi a , Monica Borgatti a , Ilaria Lampronti a , Elisabetta Lambertini a , Elena Torreggiani a , and Roberto Gambari a , b
  a BioPharmaNet, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Ferrara University, Ferrara, Italy   b Biotechnology Center, Ferrara University, Ferrara, Italy
 Address for correspondence: Roberto Gambari, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Via Fossato di Mortara 74, 44100 Ferrara, Italy. Voice: 39-532-424500; fax 39-532-424443. gam@unife.it
Copyright © 2009 The New York Academy of Sciences
KEYWORDS
osteoclast • rheumatoid arthritis • osteoporosis • apoptosis • medicinal plants • Emblica officinalis

ABSTRACT

Osteoclasts (OCs) are involved in several pathologies associated with bone loss, including rheumatoid arthritis, osteoporosis, bone metastasis of myeloma, osteosarcoma, and breast cancer. In this review we determined the effects of natural compounds, including extracts from medicinal plants, on differentiation and survival of human primary OCs obtained from peripheral blood. We found that OCs from umbilical cord blood and peripheral blood behave differently in response to molecules inducing apoptosis in this experimental system. Apoptosis induced by decoy oligonucleotides was reproducibly obtained in OCs from peripheral blood but not in OCs derived from cord blood. With respect to effects of medicinal plants, we found that crude extracts of Emblica officinalis are able to induce specifically programmed cell death of mature OCs without altering the process of osteoclastogenesis. E. officinalis specifically increased the expression levels of Fas, a critical member of the apoptotic pathway. Gel shift experiments BioPharmaNet demonstrate that E. officinalis extracts specifically compete with the binding of a transcription factor involved in osteoclastogenesis NF-κB to its specific target DNA sequences. This might explain the observed effects of E. officinalis on the expression levels of IL-6, an NF-κB-specific target gene. We suggest the application of natural products as an alternative tool for therapy applied to bone diseases.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.04906.x About DOI

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