Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.272, No.1, 116-124, 2000
Regulation of collagenolytic protease secretion through c-Src in osteoclasts
The role of pp60c-src activity in the synthesis and secretion of the collagenolytic cysteine proteases (CCPs), cathepsin K (CAK), cathepsin L (CAL), and cathepsin B (CAB), by osteoclasts was investigated. Synthesis and secretion of CAL were up-regulated by 1 alpha,25-(OH)(2)D-3, but neither those of CAK dominant relative to GAL, nor CAB, barely detectable, levels changed in the experiments. Though PP1, a pp60(c-sre) inhibitor, had no effect on CCPs synthesis, suppressed the CAK and CAL secretion. Wortmannin, a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) inhibitor that works as a second messenger for pp60(c-src), and cytochalasin B, an inhibitor of actin polymerization, suppressed the secretion of both CAK and CAL without suppressing synthesis. Hydroxyproline release, an indicator of degradation of type-I collagen, and F-actin ring formation, a structure linked to osteoclastic bone resorption, were suppressed by PP1, cytochalasin B or wortmannin. These results suggested inhibition of pp60(c-src) activity affected the osteoclastic cytoskeleton, which in turn reflected the suppression of bone resorption.