P. Watson et al., PARATHYROID-HORMONE RESTORES BONE MASS AND ENHANCES OSTEOBLAST INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH-FACTOR-I GENE-EXPRESSION IN OVARIECTOMIZED RATS, Bone, 16(3), 1995, pp. 357-365
In the osteopenic rat model, estrogen deficiency results in increased
bone turnover with net bone loss occurring during cancellous modeling.
However, estrogen-deficient rats treated with parathyroid hormone (PT
H) experience a net gain of bone tissue due to the anabolic effects of
PTH, To evaluate the possibility that local insulinlike growth factor
I OGF-I) production modulates the in vivo balance of bone formation a
nd resorption in ovariectomized (OVX) estrogen-deficient rats and in O
VX rats treated with PTH, we have studied the expression of IGF-I mRNA
in cancellous bone osteoblasts using in situ hybridization techniques
. Three-month-old virgin rats were subjected to sham surgery or OVX. T
wo weeks later, half the OVX rats began treatment with hPTH(1-34), 5 m
u g/100 g body weight, 5 days/week for 4 weeks, All animals were kille
d at the same time, providing three groups: sham surgery alone; OVX al
one; and OVX + PTH. Bone histomorphometry performed in undecalcified s
ections of tibial metaphysis confirmed that OVX rats had significantly
(p < 0.05) increased bone surface formation rates (BFR/BS, mu m(3)/mu
m(2)/year) with osteopenia while OVX + PTH rats had increased BFWBS w
ith increased bone volumes compared to sham animals (p < 0.05). Decalc
ified tissue from all three groups contained immunoreactive IGF-I, Sim
ilar tissue sections were hybridized with an S-35-labeled IGF-I antise
nse riboprobe. Evaluation of the specific signal over cancellous osteo
blasts allowed a relative estimate of IGF-I mRNA transcript abundance
in the three groups by counting silver grains per osteoblast, correcte
d for background activity. Despite evidence for increased BFR/BS, OVX
animals had comparable frequency distributions of grain counts (after
correction for background) to sham animals (88% of cells containing le
ss than or equal to 1 grain with a mean of 0.76 +/- 0.28 grains/osteob
last vs, 81% containing less than or equal to 1 grain with a mean of 0
.61 +/- 0.09, NS). However, OVX + PTH animals had over 40% of osteobla
sts with greater than or equal to 2 grains per cell and twice the IGF-
I mRNA abundance that either control group had (ANOVA, p < 0.001; OVX
+ PTH compared to either sham or OVX, p < 0.05). These data suggest th
at the anabolic effect of PTH is associated with increased IGF-I mRNA
steady state levels; while estrogen deficiency causes increased bone t
urnover, increased levels of IGF-I mRNA were not observed.