Scottish Daily Mail

Why a healthy skeleton is a key defence against ILLNESS

No, we’re not ribbing you, bones have an important role to play in your health — from stress to weight gain

- By JOHN NAISH

WE know our bones stop us from flopping about like jellyfish, and that breaking them hurts. But now investigat­ors are discoverin­g how bones do far more than hold us up.

Emerging studies show that our skeletons play key roles in producing a hormone that drives our fight-or-flight instincts, helps control our appetite, determines our risk of dementia — and can even make the difference between life and death when severe illness such as sepsis strikes.

The hormone osteocalci­n is produced by osteoblast­s, the cells responsibl­e for building our bones.

Gerard karsenty, a professor of genetics and developmen­t who has led the latest research at Columbia University, showed that when mice are bred without the ability to produce osteocalci­n, they don’t get stressed or frightened.

Lacking fear responses — previously thought to be governed by the hormone adrenaline — would make them easy prey as ‘without osteocalci­n, they don’t react strongly to danger’, Professor karsenty concluded in the journal Cell Metabolism last november.

The professor has shown that when our brains sense a threat, they instruct our skeletons to pump osteocalci­n, which is primarily produced by bone, into the blood to get us to take action.

Professor karsenty’s team has also shown that osteocalci­n can boost athleticis­m and endurance by raising the ability of our muscles and blood cells to take in glucose, fuelling us.

Last year, Dutch researcher­s in the journal Frontiers in Endocrinol­ogy reported that osteocalci­n appears to regulate healthy brain developmen­t. Lab tests found mice born lacking the hormone have smaller and less developed hippocampu­ses — areas of the brain that are crucial in forming memories.

The research suggests osteocalci­n also regulates the production of chemical brain messengers such as dopamine, which is involved in reward and motivation, and serotonin, which regulates mood, memory and sleep.

Such evidence raises an intriguing possibilit­y: could age-related bone degradatio­n be contributi­ng to cognitive decline and dementia?

Dr Chris Murgatroyd, a reader in molecular neuroscien­ce at Manchester Metropolit­an University, has investigat­ed this question in research published in the journal Age and Ageing.

His 2016 study of 225 older women found that the lower a women’s blood levels of osteocalci­n, the more likely she was to perform poorly in cognitive tests.

‘Bone and cognition are strongly related,’ he told Good Health. ‘Age-related reductions in bone health are seen along with deteriorat­ion in cognition.’

what we don’t yet know is whether falling osteocalci­n levels in ageing bones cause cognitive decline, or if they fall at the same time as cognition starts to fail.

Dr Murgatroyd says it is possible that low osteocalci­n and poor cognition are the result of low vitamin D levels. Studies have shown our vitamin D levels tend to fall as we age, not least because our skin becomes less efficient at synthesisi­ng it from sunshine.

whatever the exact associatio­ns, Dr Murgatroyd says we can help protect ourselves by getting out into the sunshine and exercising.

‘That will help our vitamin D levels and can get us doing highimpact exercise such as walking, which strengthen­s bones and may preserve osteocalci­n levels.’

U.S. scientists are also investigat­ing how our bones may protect us against obesity-related illnesses such as type 2 diabetes.

Dr Stavroula kousteni, an associate professor of physiology and cellular biophysics at Columbia University, is leading the study of a hormone called lipocalin 2 (LCn2). Until recently, it was believed that our fat cells produced LCn2, but Dr kousteni’s studies have shown that bone osteoblast­s produce 90 per cent of it. what’s more, she reports that our skeletons release LCn2 in bursts after meals, as a ‘stopeating’ signal to our brains.

Her study, published in the journal nature in 2017, suggests that our skeletons treble the amount of LCn2 after meals.

In experiment­s, mice bred without LCn2-producing bone cells developed 20 per cent more body fat and ate 16 per cent more food than normal mice. But when injected with LCn2, their feeding returned to normal.

The hormone lowered their blood sugar levels and increased their insulin sensitivit­y. LCn2 appears to have similar benefits in humans. Dr kousteni’s team has found people with higher levels of the hormone after eating had lower body weights and blood sugar levels. Dr kousteni has begun to test LCn2 levels in people with type 2 diabetes and reports that supplement­ary injections of the hormone may help with weight control. However, she adds more safety research is required. nottingham University researcher­s have suggested higher levels of osteocalci­n may promote the health of cells in arteries and veins.

In this way, osteocalci­n may protect our hearts, says Dr Sophie Millar, a researcher in vascular medicine who co-authored the study in the Journal of Cellular Physiology last november.

Meanwhile in January, researcher­s at Tongji University in Shanghai reported in the journal Aging that stroke patients given osteocalci­n after they fell ill subsequent­ly showed less brain damage. The researcher­s speculate that the hormone prevents inflammato­ry damage in the brain caused by the stroke.

Studies have also shown that patients in intensive care with lifethreat­ening conditions such as sepsis are significan­tly more likely to die if they also show rapid thinning of their bones.

It appears our skeletons may play a strong hand in determinin­g if we make it to old bones.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom