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Isoliquiritigenin Decreases Bone Resorption and Osteoclast Differentiation

Authors :
Kaitlyn M. Joyce
Carmen P. Wong
Ian A. Scriven
Dawn A. Olson
Daniel R. Doerge
Adam J. Branscum
Lara H. Sattgast
William G. Helferich
Russell T. Turner
Urszula T. Iwaniec
Source :
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research. 66:2100974
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

A dose-ranging study is performed using young estrogen-depleted rats to determine whether dietary isoliquiritigenin (ILQ) alters bone metabolism and if the effects are associated with estrogen receptor signaling.Six-week-old rats (ovariectomized at 4 weeks of age) are fed diets containing 0, 100, 250, or 750 ppm ILQ (n = 5/treatment) for 7 days. Gene expression in femur and uterus, blood markers of bone turnover, body composition, and uterine weight and epithelial cell height are determined. Because ILQ lowers bone resorption, the effect of ILQ on in vitro differentiation of osteoclasts from bone marrow of mice is assessed. Treatment resulted in a dose-dependent increases in serum ILQ but no changes in serum osteocalcin, a marker of global bone formation. Contrastingly, ILQ administration results in reduced serum CTX-1, a marker of global bone resorption, and reduces tartrate resistant acid phosphatase expression in osteoclast culture. ILQ treatment and endogenous estrogen production had limited overlap on gene expression in femur and uterus. However, uterine epithelial cell hyperplasia is observed in two of five animals treated with 750 ppm.In conclusion, dietary ILQ reduces bone resorption in vivo and osteoclast differentiation in vitro, by mechanisms likely differing from actions of ovarian hormones.

Details

ISSN :
16134133 and 16134125
Volume :
66
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bfd35597643b0571bdfebe8f904dc96e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/mnfr.202100974