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Gewählte Publikation:

Anh, DJ; Dimai, HP; Hall, SL; Farley, JR.
Skeletal alkaline phosphatase activity is primarily released from human osteoblasts in an insoluble form, and the net release is inhibited by calcium and skeletal growth factors.
Calcif Tissue Int. 1998; 62(4):332-340 Doi: 10.1007/s002239900441
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Co-Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
Dimai Hans Peter
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Abstract:
Skeletal alkaline phosphatase (ALP) is anchored to membrane inositol-phosphate on the outer surface of osteoblasts. Although skeletal ALP activity in serum is, essentially, all in an anchorless (soluble) form, in vitro studies indicate that ALP can be released in either an anchorless, soluble form (e.g., by a phospholipase) or an anchor-intact, insoluble form (e.g., by vesicle exocytosis). The current studies were intended to define the contributions of each of these putative processes of ALP release and to assess the significance of regulation by calcium (Ca) and skeletal effectors. ALP activity was measured in serum-free medium from replicate cultures of human osteosarcoma (SaOS-2) cells and normal human bone cells. Temperature-sensitive phase distribution (in Triton X-114) allowed separation of soluble from insoluble ALP activity. Our studies revealed that most of the ALP activity released from SaOS-2 cells was in an insoluble form (78% +/- 8%), a percentage that was constant between 2 and 96 hours. A similar result was seen for normal human bone cells. Calcium had a negative, biphasic dose-dependent effect on net release of ALP activity: r = -0.85, P < 0.001 at 24 hours, with KIapparent values for biphasic inhibition of 20 and 300 mumol/l Ca. Of the skeletal effectors tested, insulin-like growth factor-II (IGF-II) had the greatest effect, decreasing the net release of ALP activity in a dose-dependent manner (r = -0.82, P < 0.005). Neither Ca nor IGF-II affected the distribution of soluble/insoluble ALP activity by more than 9%. IGF-II had no effect on extracellular ALP stability, but the addition of Ca to Ca-free cultures resulted in parallel losses of extracellular ALP activity and ALP immunoreactive protein (P < 0.001 for each). A similar effect was seen when Ca was added to Ca-free, cell-free, conditioned medium, but not when Ca was added to purified ALP, which is consistent with the general hypothesis that a Ca-dependent protease might be present in the cell-conditioned medium. Together, these data suggest that most of the ALP activity released from osteoblasts is insoluble (and, presumably, anchorless), net release of ALP activity is negatively regulated by Ca and skeletal growth factors, the effect of Ca may reflect Ca-dependent protease activity, and an exogenous (e.g., serum) phospholipase may be responsible for releasing ALP from its insoluble anchor.
Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
Alkaline Phosphatase - blood
Bone and Bones - cytology
Calcium - administration and dosage
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug - administration and dosage
Fibroblast Growth Factors - pharmacology
Growth Substances - pharmacology
Humans - pharmacology
Insulin-Like Growth Factor I - pharmacology
Insulin-Like Growth Factor II - pharmacology
Osteoblasts - cytology
Parathyroid Hormone - administration and dosage
Proteins - pharmacology
Solubility - pharmacology
Time Factors - pharmacology
Tumor Cells, Cultured - pharmacology

Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
skeletal alkaline phosphatase
osteoblasts
calcium
growth factors
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