An epigenetic “mechanostat” has been discovered that protects tooth-forming progenitor cells from mechanical stress and supports lifelong tissue regeneration. Studies using mouse incisors showed that KDM6B suppresses force-induced calcium signaling by modulating the mechanosensitive channel PIEZO1 through a chromatin-based pathway. This discovery reveals how mineralized tissues adapt to constant mechanical loads and identifies potential therapeutic targets for skeletal and dental degeneration, while providing new insights into tissue regeneration and mechanobiology as a whole.
Mineralized tissues such as teeth and bones are subjected to continuous mechanical forces throughout life. Daily activities such as chewing, chewing, and exercise generate physical stress that is essential to maintaining tissue health, but excessive mechanical stimulation can damage cells and cause degeneration. Although scientists have long understood that cells can sense and respond to mechanical cues, the molecular mechanisms that protect regenerating tissue from the deleterious effects of sustained force remained largely unknown. Understanding how tissues maintain this balance is a central challenge in regenerative biology and skeletal health research.
A research team led by Professor Yang Chai of the Center for Craniofacial Molecular Biology at the Herman Ostrow School of Dentistry at the University of Southern California is working on this challenge. The researchers used continuously growing mouse incisors as a model system to investigate how tooth progenitor cells adapt to mechanical loading. Mouse incisors are particularly well-suited for this purpose, as they regenerate throughout life while undergoing significant forces during gnawing and chewing. By combining genetic mouse models, transcriptome analysis, chromatin profiling, calcium imaging, and mechanical loading experiments, the research team systematically investigated how epigenetic regulation influences cellular responses to force. Their findings were published in Volume 14 of the journal. bone research May 28, 2026.
The researchers focused on KDM6B, an enzyme that removes repressive chromatin marks and regulates gene activity. They found that KDM6B is highly expressed in transport amplifying cells, a rapidly dividing progenitor cell population responsible for generating new tooth-forming cells. when Kdm6b Selective deletion in dental stem cell lineages resulted in impaired normal tooth growth under mechanical loading conditions. Affected incisors showed reduced growth, thinning of the dentin, enlargement of the pulp cavity, and defective differentiation of odontoblasts, the specialized cells responsible for dentin formation.
Further studies revealed that the absence of KDM6B renders progenitor cells abnormally sensitive to mechanical stress. loss of Kdm6b It caused excessive activation of PIEZO1, a mechanosensitive ion channel that converts physical forces into intracellular calcium signals. Elevated PIEZO1 activity caused aberrant calcium influx and increased cell death within the progenitor compartment. Importantly, reducing mechanical loading significantly alleviates these defects, indicating that KDM6B specifically protects cells from force-induced damage rather than supporting proliferation under all conditions.
The research team uncovered the molecular pathways underlying this protective effect. KDM6B normally removes the repressive histone mark H3K27me3 from gene promoters. Bmi1BMI1 expression remains active. Second, BMI1 directly suppresses it. Piezo 1 expression. In the absence of KDM6B, H3K27me3 accumulates, Bmi1 is silenced, PIEZO1 levels increase, and calcium signaling becomes excessive. Genetic experiments confirmed this mechanism. Reducing either H3K27me3 levels or PIEZO1 expression restored calcium balance, restored progenitor cell survival, and significantly restored normal tissue architecture.
“Our study shows that KDM6B acts as an epigenetic safeguard against mechanical forces that overwhelm regenerating cells.” Professor Chai said.. “By limiting PIEZO1-dependent signaling, this pathway allows tissues to benefit from mechanical stimulation while avoiding cell damage.”
This discovery establishes a direct link between chromatin regulation and mechanical transmission, two areas that have traditionally been studied separately. Because PIEZO1 signaling is involved in many mechanically active tissues throughout the body, the newly identified KDM6B-H3K27me3-BMI1-PIEZO1 pathway may have implications far beyond dental biology. This study provides a framework to investigate how stem and progenitor cells adapt to forces in skeletal tissues, cartilage, and other mechanically dynamic organs.
”This finding suggests that epigenetic regulators can function as molecular mechanostats that modulate cellular sensitivity to force.“Professor Chai said.”Understanding these mechanisms may help develop strategies to protect regenerative cells and improve tissue repair. ”
Overall, this study revealed a previously unrecognized mechanism that allows mineralized tissue to withstand lifelong mechanical stress while sustaining regeneration. In the short term, this finding provides a new target to study mechanically induced tissue damage and degeneration. In the future, therapies aimed at modulating the KDM6B-BMI1-PIEZO1 pathway may promote tissue regeneration and help prevent disorders associated with excessive mechanical loading, including conditions affecting the musculoskeletal and craniofacial systems.
sauce:
University of Southern California
Reference magazines:
Meng, L. Others. (2026). KDM6B protects mineralized tissue homeostasis from mechanical stress through epigenetic regulation of PIEZO1-mediated mechanotransduction in mouse incisors. bone research. DOI: 10.1038/s41413-026-00544-2. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41413-026-00544-2

