Sustained activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathway is required for extracellular calcium stimulation of human osteoblast proliferation
Zm. Huang et al., Sustained activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathway is required for extracellular calcium stimulation of human osteoblast proliferation, J BIOL CHEM, 276(24), 2001, pp. 21351-21358
Elevated levels of [Ca2+](o) in bone milieu as a result of the resorptive a
ction of osteoclasts are implicated in promoting proliferation and migratio
n of osteoblasts during bone remodeling. However, mitogenic effects of [Ca2
+](o) have only been shown in some, but not all, clonal osteoblast-like cel
ls, and the molecular mechanisms underlying [Ca2+](o)-induced mitogenic sig
naling are largely unknown. In this study we demonstrated for the first tim
e that [Ca2+](o) stimulated proliferation of primary human osteoblasts and
selectively activated extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs), Neithe
r p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase nor stress-activated protein k
inase was activated by [Ca2+](o). Treatment of human osteoblasts with a MAP
kinase kinase inhibitor, PD98059, impaired both basal and [Ca2+](o)-stimul
ated phosphorylation of ERKs and also reduced both basal and [Ca2+](o)-stim
ulated proliferation. [Ca2+](o) treatment resulted in two distinctive phase
s of ERK activation: an acute phase and a sustained phase. An inhibition ti
me course revealed that it was the sustained phase, not the acute phase, th
at was critical for [Ca2+](o)-stimulated osteoblast proliferation. Our resu
lts demonstrate that mitogenic responsiveness to [Ca2+](o) is present in pr
imary human osteoblasts and is mediated via prolonged activation of the MAP
kinase kinase/ERK signal pathway.