Supernatant fluids from the cultures of bone marrow cells from 10 of 12 patients with
multiple myeloma (MM) caused
bone resorption in organ cultures of fetal rat calvaria. In four patients, the marrow cells were cultured with and without
indomethacin (1 muM). The supernatant fluids from indomethacintreated marrow cultures caused significantly less
bone resorption than supernatant fluids of cell cultures without
indomethacin. This inhibition of release of bone resorbing factor(s) by myeloma cultures is similar to the previously observed
indomethacin-induced inhibition of
osteoclast-activating factor (OAF) production by activated human leukocytes. None of the MM supernatants had any effect on cyclic (c)
AMP accumulation in resorbing bone in vitro. Four separate preparations of partially purified OAF obtained from
phytohemagglutinin-stimulated peripheral human leukocytes were tested for their ability (a) to cause
bone resorption in organ cultures of fetal rat and neonatal mouse calvaria and (b) to cause accumulation of cAMP in rat and mouse skeletal tissue in vitro. Those dilutions of OAF that caused
bone resorption had no effect on accumulation of cAMP in rat or mouse calvaria incubated in vitro. In addition, no stimulation of
adenylate cyclase activity in membranes prepared from fetal rat calvaria could be found. Bone cell populations isolated by sequential
collagenase digestion of fetal rat calvaria also showed no cAMP response to these dilutions of OAF.
Parathyroid hormone caused a clear response in all three systems. Furthermore, no cAMP response to OAF was observed in calvaria in the presence of
cholera toxin (1 mug/ml) and isobutyl-
methylxanthine (0.3 mM). These observations demonstrate that (a) supernatant fluids from MM marrow cultures stimulate
bone resorption but do not increase cAMP accumulation in vitro; (b)
indomethacin interferes with the release of bone resorbing factors by MM bone marrow cultures suggesting that this process requires
prostaglandins; and (c)
Sephadex G100 or G75 purified OAF does not stimulate
adenylate cyclase or increase cAMP accumulation at equivalent bone resorbing concentrations in rat and mouse skeletal tissue. The resorptive action of MM culture fluids is similar to that of partially purified OAF from activated cultured leukocytes, but different from those of other bone resorbing factors,
parathyroid hormone and
prostaglandin E(2), which stimulate cAMP production in skeletal tissue.