University at Buffalo
22-Sep-99
Role of Melatonin in Bone Formation Discovered
Contact: Lois Baker, 716-645-2626
ljbaker@buffalo.edu
Story available at http://www.buffalo.edu/news
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- University at Buffalo researchers have
shown for the first time that melatonin, a hormone produced naturally by the pineal gland
and used widely as a supplement to diminish jet lag and improve sleep patterns, may play
an important role in promoting bone growth. Results of the research appeared recently in
the Journal of Biological Chemistry. The study was conducted by Jerome A. Roth, Ph.D.,
professor of pharmacology and toxicology in the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences, and Moon-Il Cho, Ph.D., professor of oral biology in the UB School of Dental
Medicine. By exposing mouse pre-osteoblasts and fully differentiated rat
osteoblasts -- cells that produce and
mineralize bone matrix components -- to melatonin, the researchers were able to show that
normal body levels of the hormone speeded up the transformation of pre-osteoblasts to
fully-differentiated osteoblasts, and induced both types of cells to produce increased
amounts of several bone matrix proteins responsible for bone formation. "After
binding to its receptor on the cell surface, melatonin signals the cell to produce and
mineralize bone matrix proteins," Roth said. "This has not been shown before. We
are now investigating what cellular events are taking
place to make this happen." "We know melatonin decreases with age, and
that bone loss, which can lead to osteoporosis, is an inevitable part of aging, especially
among women," Cho said. "Can melatonin help prevent osteoporosis? Our research
indicates it may have that potential." Roth said human melatonin receptors are
very similar to rat and mouse melatonin receptors, a characteristic that makes these cells
a good model for human osteoblasts. While the mechanism that allows melatonin to
have an effect on bone formation is still unclear, the UB researchers hypothesize it may
involve an intracellular second messenger called cyclic AMP. "We know that
receptors for melatonin are coupled to adenylcyclase, an enzyme responsible for the
formation of cyclic AMP, and we know that cyclic AMP inhibits pre-osteoblast
differentiation. We think melatonin has the ability to inhibit the action of cyclic AMP
and, consequently, to trigger cell differentiation." Under standard growth
conditions in vitro, mouse pre-osteoblasts undergo cell differentiation to osteoblasts and
mineralization in 21 days. Roth and Cho showed that in the presence of melatonin, cell
differentiation was completed by day 12 and was equivalent or greater at that point than
cells grown for 21 days. Melatonin also increased expression of bone sialoprotein,
or BSP, and other bone-marker matrix proteins such as secreted protein, which is acidic
and rich in cycteine, known as SPARC; osteocalcin, and alkaline phosphatase, or ALP, the
researchers found. Most significantly, said Roth, further experiments showed that
the mouse pre-osteoblasts responded to normal body levels of melatonin, but the cells
needed to undergo five to seven days of differentiation before they were capable of
responding to melatonin at that level. The fully-differentiated rat osteoblasts
responded rapidly to normal body melatonin levels, showing increased expression of the
bone marker proteins BSP and osteocalcin within one hour of exposure to the hormone, the
researchers found "These findings place melatonin with a select handful of other
agents, including glucocorticoids, bone morphogenic proteins and vitamin D, that are known
to stimulate mineralization in osteoblasts," the researchers stated. "Because
melatonin levels decrease during the aging process, the possibility must be considered
that melatonin may have a significant influence on the rate of synthesis and maintenance
of bone in the elderly." Additional researchers involved in this work were
Byung-Gook Kim, D.D.S., Ph.D., a Korean visiting scholar, and Wen-Lang Lin, Ph.D.,
technical specialist, both in the Department of Oral Biology in the UB School of Dental
Medicine. The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of
Health, the Environmental Protection Agency and UB.
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