Litcius/Paper detail

Integrin‐associated molecules and signalling cross talking in osteoclast cytoskeleton regulation

Lingbo Kong, Biao Wang, Xiaobin Yang, Baorong He, Dingjun Hao, Liang Yan

2020Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine74 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract In the ageing skeleton, the balance of bone reconstruction could commonly be broken by the increasing of bone resorption and decreasing of bone formation. Consequently, the bone resorption gradually occupies a dominant status. During this imbalance process, osteoclast is unique cell linage act the bone resorptive biological activity, which is a highly differentiated ultimate cell derived from monocyte/macrophage. The erosive function of osteoclasts is that they have to adhere the bone matrix and migrate along it, in which adhesive cytoskeleton recombination of osteoclast is essential. In that, the podosome is a membrane binding microdomain organelle, based on dynamic actin, which forms a cytoskeleton superstructure connected with the plasma membrane. Otherwise, as the main adhesive protein, integrin regulates the formation of podosome and cytoskeleton, which collaborates with the various molecules including: c‐Cbl, p130 Cas , c‐Src and Pyk2, through several signalling cascades cross talking, including: M‐CSF and RANKL. In our current study, we discuss the role of integrin and associated molecules in osteoclastogenesis cytoskeletal, especially podosomes, regulation and relevant signalling cascades cross talking.

Topics & Concepts

PodosomeCell biologyOsteoclastIntegrinCytoskeletonBone resorptionRANKLActin cytoskeletonChemistryBiologyCellReceptorBiochemistryGeneticsActivator (genetics)Bone Metabolism and DiseasesCell Adhesion Molecules ResearchBone health and treatments