Abstract

BackgroundDeer Sinew serves as a medicinal food, and has been used for treating skeletal diseases, especially bone diseases in a long history. Thus, it could become an alternative option for the prevention and therapeutic remedy of bone-related diseases. In our previous study, we established an optimal extraction process of the enzymatic hydrolysates from Chinese Sika deer sinews (DSEH), and we demonstrated that DSEH significantly promoted the proliferation of MC3T3-E1 cells (an osteoblast-like cell line) with a certain dose-effect relationship. However, the precise molecular mechanism of deer sinew in regulating bone strength is still largely unknown. The aim of this study was to explore the underlying molecular mechanism of DSEH on MC3T3-E1 cells proliferation and extracellular matrix synthesis.MethodsPreparation and quality control were performed as previously described. The effect of DSEH at different administrated concentrations on cell proliferation was measured using both CCK-8 and MTT assays, and the capacity of DSEH on extracellular matrix synthesis was detected by Alizarin red staining and quantification. The gene expression pattern change of MC3T3-E1 cells under the treatment of DSEH was investigated by RNA-seq analysis accompanied with validation methods.ResultsWe demonstrated that DSEH promoted MC3T3-E1 cell proliferation and extracellular matrix synthesis by regulating multiple functional genes. DSEH significantly increased the expression levels of genes that promoted cell proliferation such as Gstp1, Timp1, Serpine1, Cyr61, Crlf1, Thbs1, Ctgf, P4ha2, Sod3 and Nqo1. However, DSEH significantly decreased the expression levels of genes that inhibited cell proliferation such as Mt1, Cdc20, Gas1, Nrp2, Cmtm3, Dlk2, Sema3a, Rbm25 and Hspb6. Furthermore, DSEH mildly increased the expression levels of osteoblast gene markers.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that DSEH facilitate MC3T3-E1 cell proliferation and extracellular matrix synthesis to consolidate bone formation and stability, but prevent MC3T3-E1 cells from oxidative stress-induced damage, apoptosis and further differentiation. These findings deepened the current understanding of DSEH on regulating bone development, and provided theoretical support for the discovery of optional prevention and treatment for bone-related diseases.

Highlights

  • Deer Sinew serves as a medicinal food, and has been used for treating skeletal diseases, especially bone diseases in a long history

  • Deer sinews enzymatic hydrolysate (DSEH) showed no significant effects on extracellular matrix synthesis of primary osteoblasts

  • We addressed that DSEH promoted osteoblast proliferation and extracellular matrix synthesis by increasing the expression levels of genes positively regulating the proliferation of MC3T3E1 cells, including glutathione Stransferase P1 (Gstp1), Timp1, Serpine1, Cyr61, cytokine receptor-like factor 1 (Crlf1), Thbs1, connective tissue growth factor (Ctgf), prolyl 4hydroxylase subunit alpha-2 (P4ha2), Sod3 and NAD(P) H dehydrogenase [quinone] 1 (Nqo1)

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Summary

Introduction

Deer Sinew serves as a medicinal food, and has been used for treating skeletal diseases, especially bone diseases in a long history It could become an alternative option for the prevention and therapeutic remedy of bone-related diseases. By using an ovariectomized rat model of osteoporosis, the researchers demonstrated that deer sinew extract could significantly increase bone mineral density and serum hydroxyproline, and improve the histomorphometric parameters and mechanical indicators of bone [2]. Collagens including types I, III and V are the major extracellular matrices in bone, and type I collagen accounts for about 95% of the total collagen components present in bone and approximately 80% of the entire proteins of bone Those collagens play pivotal roles in maintaining bone strength and further prevent bone fragility related diseases, such as osteogenesis imperfecta and osteoporosis [10]. The precise molecular mechanism of deer sinew in regulating bone strength is still largely unknown

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