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A maternal brain hormone that builds bone

Authors :
Babey, Muriel E.
Krause, William C.
Chen, Kun
Herber, Candice B.
Torok, Zsofia
Nikkanen, Joni
Rodriguez, Ruben
Zhang, Xiao
Castro-Navarro, Fernanda
Wang, Yuting
Wheeler, Erika E.
Villeda, Saul
Leach, J. Kent
Lane, Nancy E.
Scheller, Erica L.
Chan, Charles K. F.
Ambrosi, Thomas H.
Ingraham, Holly A.
Source :
Nature; August 2024, Vol. 632 Issue: 8024 p357-365, 9p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In lactating mothers, the high calcium (Ca2+) demand for milk production triggers significant bone loss1. Although oestrogen normally counteracts excessive bone resorption by promoting bone formation, this sex steroid drops precipitously during this postpartum period. Here we report that brain-derived cellular communication network factor 3 (CCN3) secreted from KISS1 neurons of the arcuate nucleus (ARCKISS1) fills this void and functions as a potent osteoanabolic factor to build bone in lactating females. We began by showing that our previously reported female-specific, dense bone phenotype2originates from a humoral factor that promotes bone mass and acts on skeletal stem cells to increase their frequency and osteochondrogenic potential. This circulatory factor was then identified as CCN3, a brain-derived hormone from ARCKISS1neurons that is able to stimulate mouse and human skeletal stem cell activity, increase bone remodelling and accelerate fracture repair in young and old mice of both sexes. The role of CCN3 in normal female physiology was revealed after detecting a burst of CCN3 expression in ARCKISS1neurons coincident with lactation. After reducing CCN3 in ARCKISS1neurons, lactating mothers lost bone and failed to sustain their progeny when challenged with a low-calcium diet. Our findings establish CCN3 as a potentially new therapeutic osteoanabolic hormone for both sexes and define a new maternal brain hormone for ensuring species survival in mammals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
632
Issue :
8024
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs66888067
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07634-3