Periosteum-derived Osteocrin regulates bone growth through both endochondral ossification and intramembranous ossification

2019 
During development of long bones, two mechanistically distinct processes contribute to long- and short-axis growth. Endochondral ossification in the growth plate leads to the long-axis growth, while intramembranous ossification including apposition in the periosteum regulates the short axis growth. Here, we show that periosteal osteoblast-derived secretory peptide, Osteocrin (OSTN), promotes both types of long bone growth through potentiation of signaling by C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP), because OSTN inhibits the clearance of CNP by binding to natriuretic peptide receptor 3 (NPR3). The mice lacking OSTN showed less bone mass in trabecular and cortical regions than the control mice, suggesting the dual functions of OSTN in long bone growth. We found that OSTN regulated trabecular bone formation by inducing proliferation and maturation of chondrocytes possibly through enhancing CNP-dependent signaling. Besides the contribution of OSTN to long axis growth, we demonstrated that OSTN together with CNP induced osteoblast differentiation of periosteum-derived multipotent progenitor cells expressing NPR3. These data suggest that OSTN induces long bone growth through endochondral ossification and osteoblast specification of multipotent progenitor cells in the periosteum.
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