Generation of novel bone forming cells (monoosteophils) from the cathelicidin-derived peptide LL-37 treated monocytes.
Zhang. Zhifang Z; Shively. John E JE
Key Findings
- LL-37 treatment converts circulating monocytes into large, adherent bone‑forming cells (monoosteophils)
- Monoosteophils produce bone‑like nodules in vitro and form bone structures when transplanted into mice
- These cells express both osteoblast and osteoclast proteins, distinguishing them from traditional bone cells
Practical Outcomes
- At present the findings are not ready for DIY use; they require cell culture and animal work. However, the study suggests that targeting LL-37 pathways might become a future strategy for enhancing bone repair or preventing bone loss, pending safety and delivery research.
Summary
Researchers found that the natural peptide LL-37 can turn blood monocytes into a new type of bone‑forming cell they call monoosteophils. These cells make bone‑like structures in lab dishes and even in mice, and they show markers of both bone‑building and bone‑breaking cells. While the work is still early‑stage and needs lab equipment, it hints that boosting LL-37 could one day help heal fractures or treat osteoporosis.
Abstract
Bone generation and maintenance involve osteoblasts, osteoclasts, and osteocytes which originate from unique precursors and rely on key growth factors for differentiation. However, an incomplete understanding of bone forming cells during wound healing has led to an unfilled clinical need such as nonunion of bone fractures. Since circulating monocytes are often recruited to sites of injury and may differentiate into various cell types including osteoclasts, we investigated the possibility that circulating monocytes in the context of tissue injury may also contribute to bone repair. In particular, we hypothesized that LL-37 (produced from hCAP-18, cathelicidin), which recruits circulating monocytes during injury, may play a role in bone repair. Treatment of monocytes from blood with LL-37 for 6 days resulted in their differentiation to large adherent cells. Growth of LL-37-differentiated monocytes on osteologic discs reveals bone-like nodule formation by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). In vivo transplantation studies in NOD/SCID mice show that LL-37-differentiated monocytes form bone-like structures similar to endochondral bone formation. Importantly, LL-37-differentiated monocytes are distinct from conventional monocyte-derived osteoclasts, macrophages, and dendritic cells and do not express markers of the mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) lineage, distinguishing them from the conventional precursors of osteoblasts. Furthermore, LL-37 differentiated monocytes express intracellular proteins of both the osteoblast and osteoclast lineage including osteocalcin (OC), osteonectin (ON), bone sialoprotein II (BSP II), osteopontin (OP), RANK, RANKL, MMP-9, tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), and cathepsin K (CK). Blood derived monocytes treated with LL-37 can be differentiated into a novel bone forming cell that functions both in vitro and in vivo. We propose the name monoosteophil to indicate their monocyte derived lineage and their bone forming phenotype. These cells may have wide ranging implications in the clinic including repair of broken bones and treatment of osteoporosis.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-11-15T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.pone.0013985
49
63