Copyright © 2005 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.
Genetic disorders of the LRP5–Wnt signalling pathway affecting the skeleton
Available online 1 February 2005.
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Osteoporosis is a common, increasingly prevalent and potentially debilitating condition of men and women. Genetic factors are major determinants of bone mass and the risk of fracture, but few genes have been definitively demonstrated to be involved. The identification of these factors will provide novel insights into the processes of bone formation and loss and thus the pathogenesis of osteoporosis, enabling the rational development of novel therapies. In this article, we present the extensive genetic and functional data indicating that the LRP5 gene and the Wnt signalling pathway are key players in bone formation and the risk of osteoporosis, and that LRP5 signalling is essential for normal morphology, developmental processes and bone health.
Article Outline
- Introduction
- Background
- The biology of LRP5
- LRP5 and bone-mass determination: searching for the osteoporosis gene
- LRP5 and the osteoporosis pseudoglioma syndrome (OPPG)
- LRP5 and the high-bone-mass phenotype
- LRP5 mouse models
- LRP6
- LRP5 and osteopetrosis and other disorders of increased bone density
- LRP5 and population variation of bone mineral density
- LRP5 and other diseases
- LRP5–Wnt signalling in familial exudative vitreoretinopathy
- Type-1 diabetes mellitus
- Malignant disease
- Concluding remarks and future directions
- References






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