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The effects of epigenetic modifications on bone remodeling in age-related osteoporosis

Wenyue Yu, Heling Wang, Jianying Zhang, Chengcheng Yin

2022Connective Tissue Research12 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: As the population ages, there is an increased risk of fracture and morbidity diseases associated with aging, such as age-related osteoporosis and other bone diseases linked to aging skeletons. RESULTS: Several bone-related cells, including multipotent bone mesenchymal stem cells, osteoblasts that form bone tissue, and osteoclasts that break it down, are in symbiotic relationships throughout life. Growing evidence indicates that epigenetic modifications of cells caused by aging contribute to compromised bone remodeling and lead to osteoporosis. A number of epigenetic mechanisms are at play, including DNA/RNA modifications, histone modifications, microRNAs (miRNAs), and long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), as well as chromatin remodeling. CONCLUSION: In this review, we summarized the epigenetic modifications of different bone-related cells during the development and progression of osteoporosis associated with aging. Additionally, we described a compensatory recovery mechanism under epigenetic regulation that may lead to new strategies for regulating bone remodeling in age-related osteoporosis.

Topics & Concepts

EpigeneticsOsteoporosisBone remodelingChromatin remodelingmicroRNAChromatinBiologyMesenchymal stem cellDNA methylationPopulationMedicineBioinformaticsCell biologyGeneticsEndocrinologyGene expressionGeneEnvironmental healthBone Metabolism and DiseasesCancer-related molecular mechanisms researchEpigenetics and DNA Methylation
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