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      Effect of omeprazole, an inhibitor of H+,K(+)-ATPase, on bone resorption in humans.

      Calcified Tissue International
      Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Alkaline Phosphatase, blood, Biological Markers, urine, Body Weight, drug effects, Bone Resorption, drug therapy, Calcium, Child, Cimetidine, pharmacology, Female, Histamine H2 Antagonists, Humans, Hydroxyproline, Male, Middle Aged, Omeprazole, therapeutic use, Osteocalcin, Piperidines, Proton Pump Inhibitors, Stomach Ulcer

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          Abstract

          Omeprazole is an inhibitor of gastric H+,K(+)-ATPase. Although the major proton transport of osteoclast is mediated by a vacuolar-type H(+)-ATPase which is different from the gastric H+,K(+)-ATPase, in vitro studies have demonstrated that omeprazole inhibits bone resorption. In this study, the effect of omeprazole on bone resorption was evaluated in patients who had a history of gastric ulcer and were treated with maintenance doses of H2 blocker without any gastric complaints at the study time. H2-blocker administration was changed to omeprazole treatment in the study group and to no treatment in the control group. Urinary excretion of hydroxyproline and calcium decreased after omeprazole treatment in the study group. Serum intact PTH, alkaline phosphatase, osteocalcin, and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) increased in this group. In the control group, there were not any changes in these parameters. The discrepancy between serum TRAP and urinary excretion of hydroxyproline and calcium in the study group was thought to be due to the suppression of bone resorption by omeprazole, which probably interfered the acidification at resorption lacunae and resulted in the inactivation of TRAP and other lysosomal enzymes. The results of our study suggest the possibility that the specific inhibitors of the osteoclastic proton pump (such as bafilomycins) will more effectively suppress bone resorption and be useful for the treatment of metabolic bone diseases with increased bone resorption.

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          Bafilomycins: a class of inhibitors of membrane ATPases from microorganisms, animal cells, and plant cells.

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            Osteoclastic bone resorption by a polarized vacuolar proton pump.

            Bone resorption depends on the formation, by osteoclasts, of an acidic extracellular compartment wherein matrix is degraded. The mechanism by which osteoclasts transport protons into that resorptive microenvironment was identified by means of adenosine triphosphate-dependent weak base accumulation in isolated osteoclast membrane vesicles, which exhibited substrate and inhibition properties characteristic of the vacuolar, electrogenic H+-transporting adenosine triphosphatase (H+-ATPase). Identify of the proton pump was confirmed by immunoblot of osteoclast membrane proteins probed with antibody to vacuolar H+-ATPase isolated from bovine kidney. The osteoclast's H+-ATPase was immunocytochemically localized to the cell-bone attachment site. Immunoelectron microscopy showed that the H+-ATPase was present in the ruffled membrane, the resorptive organ of the cell.
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              Microelectrode studies on the acid microenvironment beneath adherent macrophages and osteoclasts.

              Osteoclasts and activated macrophages in culture were shown to generate an acidic microenvironment specifically in the attachment zone between the cell and the base of the culture dish. Measurements using pH microelectrodes revealed that osteoclasts, when firmly attached, could achieve a pH fall of about 1 unit min-1 to a limit value of pH 3.0 or less. Activated macrophages produced a slower fall of 0.5-2 pH units h-1 and a limit value of pH 3.6-3.7 was generally detected. The method of activation was relatively unimportant, but where macrophages formed clumps the pH effect was reinforced. Osteoclasts were also examined in situ in osteoporotic bone fragments in rabbit ear chambers, using a combination H+ and Ca2+ double-barrelled electrode. The pH readings reached a lower limit of 4.7 and the calcium concentration rose to a maximum of 40 mM in the erosion sites. In vivo such acid conditions would favor the direct extracellular action of secreted lysosomal proteinases in the degradation of collagen by both cell types.
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