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Anti–NF-κB peptide derived from nuclear acidic protein attenuates ovariectomy-induced osteoporosis in mice

Kenji Takami, K. Okamoto, Yuki Etani, Makoto Hirao, Akira Miyama, Gensuke Okamura, Atsushi Goshima, Taihei Miura, Takuya Kurihara, Yuji Fukuda, Takashi Kanamoto, Ken Nakata, Seiji Okada, Kosuke Ebina

2023JCI Insight10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

NF-κB is a transcription factor that is activated with aging. It plays a key role in the development of osteoporosis by promoting osteoclast differentiation and inhibiting osteoblast differentiation. In this study, we developed a small anti-NF-κB peptide called 6A-8R from a nuclear acidic protein (also known as macromolecular translocation inhibitor II, Zn2+-binding protein, or parathymosin) that inhibits transcriptional activity of NF-κB without altering its nuclear translocation and binding to DNA. Intraperitoneal injection of 6A-8R attenuated ovariectomy-induced osteoporosis in mice by inhibiting osteoclast differentiation, promoting osteoblast differentiation, and inhibiting sclerostin production by osteocytes in vivo with no apparent side effects. Conversely, in vitro, 6A-8R inhibited osteoclast differentiation by inhibiting NF-κB transcriptional activity, promoted osteoblast differentiation by promoting Smad1 phosphorylation, and inhibited sclerostin expression in osteocytes by inhibiting myocyte enhancer factors 2C and 2D. These findings suggest that 6A-8R has the potential to be an antiosteoporotic therapeutic agent with uncoupling properties.

Topics & Concepts

OsteoclastOsteoblastNF-κBChemistryTranscription factorRUNX2PhosphorylationSclerostinInternal medicineCell biologyOsteoporosisNFKB1EndocrinologyIn vivoEnhancerIn vitroSignal transductionBiochemistryBiologyGeneWnt signaling pathwayMedicineBiotechnologyBone Metabolism and DiseasesNF-κB Signaling PathwaysTGF-β signaling in diseases
Anti–NF-κB peptide derived from nuclear acidic protein attenuates ovariectomy-induced osteoporosis in mice | Litcius