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  • Title: The role of reactive oxygen intermediates in osteoclastic bone resorption.
    Author: Hall TJ, Schaeublin M, Jeker H, Fuller K, Chambers TJ.
    Journal: Biochem Biophys Res Commun; 1995 Feb 06; 207(1):280-7. PubMed ID: 7857277.
    Abstract:
    Osteoclasts have been shown to produce reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) and it has been suggested that ROI are involved in the process of bone resorption. ROI have also been shown to play a central role in the activation of the multisubunit transcription factor NF-kappa B that enhances the transcription of genes encoding defence and signaling proteins. Therefore, we have assessed the effect of pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC), an oxygen-radical scavenger and metal chelator that is a selective and potent inhibitor of NF-kappa B activation, on osteoclastic bone resorption in the bone slice assay. PDTC (0.001-0.1 mM) dose-dependently and non-cytotoxically inhibited osteoclast activity with an IC50 of 0.01 mM. PDTC (0.01 mM) caused no change in the ratio of resorption pit area to resorption pit depth as measured by Lasertec confocal microscopy, indicating that ROI are not involved in the resorptive process per se. This view is supported by time-course studies showing that addition of PDTC or N-acetyl cysteine (NAC; an ROI scavenger, but not metal chelator), 6 hr after the start of the assay had no significant effect on subsequent bone resorption. Desferal (100 microM), a chelator of iron and other metal ions, had no significant effect on bone resorption, indicating (along with the results with NAC) that ROI-scavenging rather than metal chelation is responsible for inhibition of osteoclastic bone resorption by PDTC. Taken together these results indicate that ROI produced by osteoclasts in the bone slice assay are not involved in the process of bone resorption, but are important during osteoclast activation for bone resorption, possibly being involved in activation of the transcription factor NF-kappa B.
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