Abstract
Mycobacterium bovis BCG (BCG) is a live vaccine used worldwide against tuberculosis. However, it has unfavourable side effects such as osteitis or osteomyelitis, and these sometimes lead to vertebral caries in some patients as a result of bone resorption. Osteoblasts might play a role in the bone resorption caused by BCG infection, because they are central cells in bone metabolism. Cultured osteoblast-like cell lines (MC3T3-E1) derived from C57BL mice susceptible to BCG infection cells were infected with BCG at several doses. Interestingly, internalization of BCG-enveloped phagosome-like membrane in osteoblast-like cells were observed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Owing to infection, the proliferation and alkaline phosphatase activity of the osteoblast-like cells were reduced in a dose-dependent manner. On the other hand, interleukin (IL)-6 production was considerably enhanced by infection. These results suggest that BCG infects osteoblasts, suppressing their proliferation and differentiation and inducing bone resorption, which may be related to osteitis/osteomyelitis and bone caries caused by BCG infection.
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