Expansion of bone marrow adipocytes in obese mice leads to PD-L1-driven bone marrow immunosuppression and osteoclastogenesis
Samantha N. Costa, Carolyn Chlebek, Lindsey Gray, Peter Caradonna, Sergey Ryzhov, Clifford J. Rosen

TL;DR
Obesity increases bone marrow fat, which promotes bone loss through immune signals involving PD-L1 and osteoclast formation.
Contribution
This study reveals a novel mechanism linking bone marrow adipose expansion to obesity-related bone loss via PD-1/PD-L1 signaling and osteoclastogenesis.
Findings
Obesity increases bone marrow adiposity and Mcp-1 expression, promoting osteoclast formation.
PD-L1+ myeloid cells stimulate osteoclast precursors through PD-1/PD-L1 signaling.
Depleting bone marrow adipocytes reduces PD-L1+ cells and prevents obesity-related bone loss.
Abstract
Bone marrow adipocytes are known to have a critical role within the bone marrow niche. However, our understanding of bone marrow adipose tissue expansion with obesity and the role it plays in immune cell regulation and osteoclastogenesis is limited. Here, we showed the expansion of bone marrow adipocytes promoted osteoclast differentiation and subsequently led to obesity-related trabecular and cortical bone loss through a stimulatory effect of the PD-1/PD-L1 axis. Bone marrow adipocytes isolated from obese mice had increased Mcp-1 expression, a key regulator of osteoclastogenesis and myeloid cell accumulation. With the increase in bone marrow adipose tissue-derived Mcp-1, we found an increase in the number of PD-L1+ myeloid cells. While these cells inhibited activated T-cells, we found evidence of a stimulatory osteoclastogenic effect of PD-L1+ myeloid cells on PD-1-expressing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic Diseases · Bone Metabolism and Diseases · Immune cells in cancer
