Histochemical examination of ectopic bone formation induced in rat bone marrow

被引:0
|
作者
Tanaka M. [1 ]
Amizuka N. [2 ]
Kim K.J. [1 ]
Itoh T. [1 ]
Ozawa H. [2 ]
机构
[1] Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Tokyo Woman's Medical College, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 162
[2] First Department of Oral Anatomy, Niigata Univ. School of Dentistry, Gakkoucho-dori, Niigata 951
关键词
BFGF; Bone marrow ablation; Ectopic bone; Osteoblast; Osteoclast;
D O I
10.1007/BF02490076
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We examined the rapid formation and subsequent resorption of woven bone induced by partial ablation of rat bone marrow. On the 1st day after ablation, masses of clots occupied the region from which marrow was eliminated. On the 3rd day, alkaline phosphatase- (ALPase-) positive osteoblastic cells appeared in the vicinity of the marrow-eliminated region, forming woven bone. Other ectopic woven bone extended from the endosteal surface toward the bone marrow. Therefore, the newly formed bone originated in two different sites, the endosteal bone surface and the marrow tissues near the marrow-eliminated region. On the 7th day, numerous tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase- (TRAPase-) positive osteoclasts and ALPase-positive osteoblasts expressing the osteonectin gene indicated high activity in both formation and resorption of ectopic woven bone. On the 10th day, the ectopic bone had been markedly resorbed and replaced by bone marrow tissue as the ectopically formed woven bone had not been dynamically maintained, probably because of reduced bone formation activity. Immunoreactivity for basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) was indistinctly observed on osteoblastic and preosteoblastic cells on the 1st day after ablation. The fibroblastic cells in the marrow-eliminated region on the 3rd day, and both osteoblasts and preosteoblasts in the woven bone on the 7th day, showed strong immunoreactivity for bFGF. Unlike fractured cortical bone, no chondrogenesis was observed. This model appears to provide convenient material and an important clue for investigation of imbalanced bone formation and subsequent resorption.
引用
收藏
页码:67 / 76
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] RANKL signaling in bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells negatively regulates osteoblastic bone formation
    Chen, Xiao
    Zhi, Xin
    Wang, Jun
    Su, Jiacan
    BONE RESEARCH, 2018, 6
  • [32] Phenolic acids prevent sex-steroid deficiency-induced bone loss and bone marrow adipogenesis in mice
    Caviness, Perry C.
    Lazarenko, Oxana P.
    Blackburn, Michael L.
    Chen, Jennifer F.
    Randolph, Christopher E.
    Zabaleta, Jovanny
    Zhan, Fenghuang
    Chen, Jin-Ran
    JOURNAL OF NUTRITIONAL BIOCHEMISTRY, 2024, 127
  • [33] RANKL from bone marrow adipose lineage cells promotes osteoclast formation and bone loss
    Hu, Yan
    Li, Xiaoqun
    Zhi, Xin
    Cong, Wei
    Huang, Biaotong
    Chen, Huiwen
    Wang, Yajun
    Li, Yinghua
    Wang, Lipeng
    Fang, Chao
    Guo, Jiawei
    Liu, Ying
    Cui, Jin
    Cao, Liehu
    Weng, Weizong
    Zhou, Qirong
    Wang, Sicheng
    Chen, Xiao
    Su, Jiacan
    EMBO REPORTS, 2021, 22 (07)
  • [34] Overexpression of Bone Sialoprotein Leads to an Uncoupling of Bone Formation and Bone Resorption in Mice
    Valverde, Paloma
    Zhang, Jin
    Fix, Amanda
    Zhu, Ji
    Ma, Wenli
    Tu, Qisheng
    Chen, Jake
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2008, 23 (11) : 1775 - 1788
  • [35] Mast cells accumulate in rat bone marrow after ovariectomy
    Lesclous, P
    Saffar, JL
    CELLS TISSUES ORGANS, 1999, 164 (01) : 23 - 29
  • [36] A T Cell View of the Bone Marrow
    Bonomo, Adriana
    Monteiro, Ana Carolina
    Goncalves-Silva, Triciana
    Cordeiro-Spinetti, Eric
    Galvani, Romulo Goncalves
    Balduino, Alex
    FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY, 2016, 7 : 1 - 14
  • [37] Osteoclast formation at the bone marrow/bone surface interface: Importance of structural elements, matrix, and intercellular communication
    Soe, Kent
    Delaisse, Jean-Marie
    Borggaard, Xenia Goldberg
    SEMINARS IN CELL & DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2021, 112 : 8 - 15
  • [38] Targeting intercellular signals for bone regeneration from bone marrow mesenchymal progenitors
    Long, Fanxin
    CELL CYCLE, 2008, 7 (14) : 2106 - 2111
  • [39] Bone marrow fat
    Hardouin, Pierre
    Pansini, Vittorio
    Cortet, Bernard
    JOINT BONE SPINE, 2014, 81 (04) : 313 - 319
  • [40] Scleraxis-Lineage Cells Contribute to Ectopic Bone Formation in Muscle and Tendon
    Agarwal, Shailesh
    Loder, Shawn J.
    Cholok, David
    Peterson, Joshua
    Li, John
    Breuler, Christopher
    Brownley, R. Cameron
    Sung, Hsiao Hsin
    Chung, Michael T.
    Kamiya, Nobuhiro
    Li, Shuli
    Zhao, Bin
    Kaartinen, Vesa
    Davis, Thomas A.
    Qureshi, Ammar T.
    Schipani, Ernestina
    Mishina, Yuji
    Levi, Benjamin
    STEM CELLS, 2017, 35 (03) : 705 - 710