Systemic administration of low-dose naltrexone increases bone mass due to blockade of opioid growth factor receptor signaling in mice osteoblasts

Life Sciences, 224, 232-240

DOI 10.1016/j.lfs.2019.03.069 PMID 30930116

Abstract

Aims

Opioid receptor blockers such as naloxone and naltrexone have been suggested to have a bone mass-increasing effect. However, the mechanisms at play have not been clarified. We examined the effects of naltrexone on osteoblasts and determined the expression of opioid growth factor receptor (OGFR) in osteoblasts. Naltrexone blocks the OGFR and other canonical opioid receptors. Thus, we designed experiments to clarify the effects of naltrexone on bone tissue by examining the physiological role of OGFR signaling in osteoblasts and the changes in bone structure after naltrexone systemic administration in mice.

MAIN

Methods

We used mouse osteoblast-like cell line MC3T3-E1 for in vitro experiments. We cultured MC3T3-E1 cells in the presence of the OGFR agonist met-enkephalin (met-enk). Then, we measured cell proliferation activity and analyzed the expression levels of cell proliferation-related genes. For our in vivo experiments, we administered naltrexone intraperitoneally to mice daily for 28 days and administered the animals in the control group equivalent volumes of saline. After sacrificing the mice, we performed micro-computed tomography and bone morphology analyses.

Key Findings

Met-enk suppressed cell proliferation in MC3T3-E1 cells. Moreover, Low dose naltrexone administration significantly increased their femoral bone mass, bone formation ratio, and osteoblast number/bone surface values when comparing the values for the same variables in the control group.

Significance

Our results suggest that naltrexone increases bone mass due to osteoblast number increments caused by the OGFR signaling block. Opioid receptor blockers have potential as therapeutic agents for osteoporosis as well as opioid antagonists.

Topics

low-dose naltrexone bone mass osteoblast proliferation mice, naltrexone opioid growth factor receptor bone formation, OGFR signaling blockade osteoblast bone anabolic effect, naltrexone osteoporosis treatment opioid receptor blocker, met-enkephalin osteoblast proliferation suppression OGFR, low-dose naltrexone bone mineral density micro-CT mice, opioid antagonist bone formation osteoblast number increase, Tanaka naltrexone OGFR osteoblast bone mass, MC3T3-E1 osteoblast opioid receptor cell proliferation, naltrexone systemic administration femoral bone mass increase
PMID 30930116 30930116 DOI 10.1016/j.lfs.2019.03.069 10.1016/j.lfs.2019.03.069

Cite this article

Tanaka, K., Kondo, H., Hamamura, K., & Togari, A. (2019). Systemic administration of low-dose naltrexone increases bone mass due to blockade of opioid growth factor receptor signaling in mice osteoblasts. *Life sciences*, *224*, 232-240. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lfs.2019.03.069