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Icaritin promotes the osteogenesis of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells via the regulation of sclerostin expression.

International journal of molecular medicine (2020-01-28)
Qiushi Wei, Bin Wang, Hailan Hu, Chuhai Xie, Long Ling, Jianliang Gao, Yanming Cao
RESUMEN

Icaritin, a metabolite of icariin, is a potent promoter of bone marrow‑derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs) osteogenesis, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. To examine the effects of icaritin on osteogenic differentiation, BMSCs were exposed to osteogenic induction medium with or without icaritin pretreatment in the present study. It was identified that icaritin (0.01‑1 µM) exhibited no cytotoxicity on the proliferative abilities of the BMSCs. Icaritin at 1 µM increased alkaline phosphatase activity, mineral deposition and osteoblast‑specific gene expression. Treatment with 1 µM Icaritin upregulated osteocalcin, RUNX family transcription factor 2, tissue‑nonspecific alkaline phosphatase and β‑catenin, and suppressed sclerostin (SOST) gene expression in different stages of osteogenic differentiation. It was also demonstrated that SOST overexpression inhibited icaritin‑induced osteogenesis. The western blot analysis data suggested that ICI 182780, which causes estrogen receptor α (ERα) degradation, reversed the icaritin‑induced decrease in SOST expression, which was inconsistent with the results of immunofluorescence analysis. In conclusion, icaritin was demonstrated to promote the osteogenesis of hBMSCs by downregulating SOST expression, and icaritin‑induced suppression of SOST was regulated in part via the Wnt/β‑catenin/ERα axis.

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Corning® syringe filters, cellulose acetate membrane (surfactant-free), diam. 28 mm, pore size 0.45 μm
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Edelfosine, ≥95% (HPLC)