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The role of statins as potential targets for bone formation

Abstract

Inhibitors of the 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase enzyme have recently been shown to stimulate bone formation in rodents both in vitro and in vivo. In bone cells, these inhibitors increase the gene expression of bone morphogenetic protein-2, which is an autocrine-paracrine factor for osteoblast differentiation.

The findings that statins increase bone formation and bone mass in rodents suggest a potential new action for these compounds, which may be beneficial in patients with established osteoporosis where marked bone loss has occurred. Recent clinical data suggest that they may reduce the risk of fracture in patients taking these drugs.

Introduction

There has been a remarkable increase in knowledge in the area of osteoporosis during the last 25 years. Patients with established osteoporosis have lost more than 50% of bone mass at critical sites in the skeleton, with marked disruption of trabecular bone microarchitecture. Anabolic therapies, therefore, are desperately needed.

Current drugs to treat osteoporosis include bisphosphonates, calcitonin, estrogen and related compounds, vitamin D analogues and ipriflavone. These are all bone resorption inhibitors, which act mainly to stabilize bone mass by inhibiting the activity of osteoclasts (the cells responsible for bone loss). The ability of these drugs to increase bone mass is relatively small, certainly no more than 2% per year. It is desirable, therefore, to have a satisfactory and universally acceptable drug that would stimulate new bone formation and correct the disturbance of trabecular microarchitecture, which is a characteristic of established osteoporosis.

Chemical nature of statins

Statins are specific, competitive inhibitors of the 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase enzyme. These include naturally occurring lovastatin, chemically modified simvastatin and pravastatin [1–3] and the synthetically derived atorvastatin, fluvastatin and cerivastatin. All of these agents are widely used for lowering cholesterol, and they provide an important and effective approach to the treatment of hyperlipidemia and arteriosclerosis [4].

Because the primary site of cholesterol synthesis is the liver, these agents have been designed to be hepatoselective. The enzyme HMG-CoA reductase catalyzes the rate-limiting step in cholesterol biosynthesis, and while cholesterol is the bulk product of the pathway controlled by this enzyme, its direct product, mevalonate, is a precursor to a number of non-sterol compounds that are vital to a variety of cellular functions.

Bone metabolism

Bone is a metabolically active organ in which the organizational pattern of the mineral and organic components determines the successful mechanical function of the skeleton [5, 6]. Bone turnover is controlled by defined agents and mechanisms that regulate bone formation and bone resorption, which are the two major processes of bone remodeling. Disturbances in these mechanisms can lead to either bone loss, resulting in osteoporosis, or an overgrowth of bone, leading to osteosclerosis. Since new bone formation is primarily a function of the osteoblast, agents regulating bone formation can act by either increasing/decreasing the replication of cells of the osteoblastic lineage or modifying the differentiated function of the osteoblast.

It would, therefore, be beneficial to stimulate the osteoblastic activity at local sites in bone by an oral anabolic agent, resulting in bone formation where needed.

Discovery of the effects of statins on bone

In attempts to identify small molecular weight bone anabolic compounds, attention has focused on the growth regulatory factors responsible for the control of normal bone remodeling. The bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) have bone-forming activity and account for the major proportion of the osteoinductive potential of bone extracts [7–9]. The BMP-2 promoter has been characterized, and based on the properties of BMP-2, this promoter was utilized as a target to identify new compounds that stimulate its transcription and subsequent osteoblast differentiation.

Identification of small molecules that enhance BMP-2 transcription utilized a cell-based screening assay [10]. Screening a collection of natural products led to the identification of an extract, containing lovastatin as the active constituent, that specifically stimulated the BMP-2 promoter. Further investigations found that statins stimulate bone formation both in vitro and in vivo in animal models of osteoporosis associated with increased expression of the BMP-2 gene in bone cells [11].

In vitro effects

Simvastatin, mevastatin and atorvastatin (but not pravastatin) were found to have identical effects to those seen with lovastatin. Cerivastatin, however, was 10-100-fold more potent than the other statins. These agents stimulated BMP-2 transcription and also increased endogenous BMP-2 mRNA and protein expression in human MG63 osteoblastic cells two-fold. These findings have been confirmed by other groups [12, 13].

It has been shown that statins cause a marked increase in osteoblast accumulation and new bone formation in cultures of neonatal murine calvaria (Fig. 1). Transient exposure of bone cultures to statins was enough to initiate a cascade of bone formation, probably induced by the local production of the osteogenic protein BMP-2. Interestingly, pravastatin was unable to stimulate the BMP-2 promoter activity and it did not stimulate new bone formation in neonatal murine calvaria.

Figure 1
figure 1

Cultures of murine neonatal calvaria incubated for either 4 or 7 days in the presence of simvastatin at 1 μM. Small amounts of new bone are present in control cultures whereas cultures exposed to simvastatin for 4 days show marked new bone formation and osteoblast accumulation. Cultures exposed for 7 days show further enhancement of bone formation.

In vivo effects

Initial in vivo experiments have shown that statins injected locally over the calvaria of normal mice result in a 30–50% increase in calvarial width. This indicates that statins have a direct effect on bone formation when applied locally.

There is a requirement, however, for an oral bone anabolic agent that stimulates systemic new bone formation for the treatment of bone loss diseases, such as osteoporosis. Ovariectomized rats, treated systemically with statins, showed marked increases in bone density when compared to untreated rats. Bones of rats treated orally with cerivastatin showed a 43% increase in tibial trabecular volumes, and rats treated orally with simvastatin showed a 38% increase in tibial trabecular volumes compared to the controls (Fig. 2). Fibroblast growth factor has been previously shown to stimulate bone formation in vivo and was used as a positive control. The anabolic effect of statins was confirmed with significant increases in both bone formation rate and mineral apposition rate in the tibiae of rats treated with cerivastatin at 0.1 mg/kg/day. Statins, therefore, have the potential to stimulate bone formation both in vitro and in vivo in rats. Cerivastatin improved cortical bone strength in ovariectomized rats when used in doses as low as 0.1 mg/kg/day, and it significantly increased bone mineral density, bone formation rate, osteocalcin mRNA levels as well as resistance to fracture [14]. Further studies have shown that simvastatin given orally to rats significantly increased cancellous bone compressive strength in the vertebral bodies of these rats [15].

Figure 2
figure 2

Bone volume in the tibia of ovariectomized rats treated either by daily oral lavage with cerivastatin (0.1 mg/kg/day) or simvastatin (10 mg/kg/day) or subcutaneously with fibroblast growth factor (FGF) (80 μg/kg/day). The bone volume is expressed as per cent bone area (BA)/ total area measured (TA). *P < 0.05, versus control group.

Mechanism of action

The reduction in mevalonate pathway intermediates with a subsequent inhibition of prenylation by statins is responsible for a large proportion of the pleiotropic effects of these drugs. Mevalonate, farnesyl pyrophosphate and geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate all inhibited statin-stimulated bone formation. Furthermore, because geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate inhibited statin stimulated bone formation, inhibition of prenylation due to geranylgeranylation must play a major role in the stimulation of bone formation by this drug.

There are many proteins known to require this form of prenylation for their activity, including guanosine triphosphatases such as Rho, Rac and Rap. These proteins play important roles in cellular proliferation and differentiation, and, therefore, any perturbation of their activity influences cellular activity. A number of the pleiotropic effects of statins result from their effects on prenylation. One of the particular roles prenylation plays in cellular activity is its control of endothelial nitric oxide synthase [16–18] and it has subsequently been shown to play a major role in the effects of statins on bone formation.

Clinical findings

Statins are bone anabolic agents, which have been orally administered to rats, and which have relatively low toxicity in humans. They could provide an important treatment for osteoporosis, particularly when significant amounts of trabecular bone have been lost. Current therapies for the treatment of osteoporosis, including estrogen replacement therapy, selective estrogen receptor modulators, and bisphosphonates, are primarily based on blunting the resorption component of bone remodeling.

Of course, the major question that arises is whether statins will have similar effects on human bone. Based on previous findings [13], Bauer and Cummings examined their large databases to determine if there was any previously unrecognized association between statin usage and skeletal status. They found that there was a possible relationship between statin use, bone mineral density and subsequent fractures [19]. Since then a study in post-menopausal women has been published that indicated a significant increase in bone mineral density associated with taking statins [20]. Statins have also been shown to exhibit a protective effect against non-pathological fracture among older women [21–25]. Conversely, several preliminary reports (one using the same database as a positive published report) have suggested that statins do not show these effects [26–28]. There are major issues with all of these studies: they are retrospective; the compliance of patients taking is statins unknown; and the dose of statin used varied considerably.

All of the statins that are currently available have been selected for their capacity to target the liver and decrease cholesterol biosynthesis, but they are poorly distributed to bone. It is uncertain, therefore, that oral administration of currently available statins will have beneficial effects on bone in humans; however, there are several possibilities for improving biodistribution to bone.

The more recent potent statins such as cerivastatin or atorvastatin may get past the liver and reach the bone. Alternative modes of administration of the statins, such as topical application through a skin patch, may improve biodistribution. Furthermore, there may be other drugs of this class that have not been selected for development as cholesterol-lowering agents because of their relatively greater biodistribution to peripheral tissues. These may be ideal drugs for use as bone-active agents.

Conclusion

Perhaps the most important consequence of these findings is not that the statins themselves may be effective drugs for diseases of bone loss, but rather that these results focus attention on the pathway of cholesterol biosynthesis and its relationship to BMP-2 expression and bone formation. This has been further emphasized by recent observations that the nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates (drugs that reduce bone resorption and have a large market for osteoporosis) also target enzymes in this pathway. This may lead to the identification of other potential molecular targets for drug discovery as well as other therapeutic approaches to enhance bone formation, and thus produce the ideal anabolic agent for osteoporosis.

Abbreviations

BMP:

= bone morphogenetic protein

HMG-CoA:

= 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A.

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Garrett, I.R., Mundy, G.R. The role of statins as potential targets for bone formation. Arthritis Res Ther 4, 237 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1186/ar413

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