Calciprotein particles regulate fibroblast growth factor-23 expression in osteoblasts.
2019
Fibroblast growth factor-23 (FGF23) is a hormone indispensable for maintaining phosphate homeostasis. In response to phosphate intake, FGF23 is secreted from osteocytes/osteoblasts and acts on the kidney to increase urinary phosphate excretion. However, the mechanism by which these cells sense phosphate intake remains elusive. Calciprotein particles are nanoparticles of calcium-phosphate precipitates bound to serum protein fetuin-A and are generated spontaneously in solution containing calcium, phosphate, and fetuin-A to be dispersed as colloids. In cultured osteoblastic cells, increase in either calcium or phosphate concentration in the medium induced FGF23 expression, which was dependent on calciprotein particle formation. When transition of calcium-phosphate precipitates from the amorphous phase to the crystalline phase was blocked by bisphosphonate, the calciprotein particle size was reduced and FGF23 expression was augmented, suggesting that small calciprotein particles containing amorphous calcium-phosphate precipitates function as a more potent FGF23 inducer than larger calciprotein particles containing crystalline calcium-phosphate precipitates. In mice, bolus phosphate administration by oral gavage transiently increased circulating calciprotein particle levels followed by a modest increase in FGF23 expression and serum FGF23 levels. However, continuous dietary phosphate load induced robust and persistent increase in circulating calciprotein particles and FGF23 levels. We confirmed by in vivo imaging that calciprotein particles injected intravenously extravasated into the bone marrow and were deposited on the inner surface of the bone, indicating that these particles have direct access to osteoblasts. Thus, we propose that osteoblasts induce FGF23 expression and secretion when they sense an increase in extracellular calciprotein particles following phosphate ingestion.
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