Cortical bone development, maintenance and porosity: genetic alterations in humans and mice influencing chondrocytes, osteoclasts, osteoblasts and osteocytes

被引:0
|
作者
Tsuyoshi Isojima
Natalie A. Sims
机构
[1] St. Vincent’s Institute of Medical Research,Department of Pediatrics
[2] Teikyo University School of Medicine,Department of Medicine at St. Vincent’s Hospital
[3] The University of Melbourne,undefined
来源
关键词
Cortical bone; Cortical porosity; Bone strength; Bone growth; sFRP4; Notum;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Cortical bone structure is a crucial determinant of bone strength, yet for many years studies of novel genes and cell signalling pathways regulating bone strength have focused on the control of trabecular bone mass. Here we focus on mechanisms responsible for cortical bone development, growth, and degeneration, and describe some recently described genetic-driven modifications in humans and mice that reveal how these processes may be controlled. We start with embryonic osteogenesis of preliminary bone structures preceding the cortex and describe how this structure consolidates then matures to a dense, vascularised cortex containing an increasing proportion of lamellar bone. These processes include modelling-induced, and load-dependent, asymmetric cortical expansion, which enables the cortex’s transition from a highly porous woven structure to a consolidated and thickened highly mineralised lamellar bone structure, infiltrated by vascular channels. Sex-specific differences emerge during this process. With aging, the process of consolidation reverses: cortical pores enlarge, leading to greater cortical porosity, trabecularisation and loss of bone strength. Each process requires co-ordination between bone formation, bone mineralisation, vascularisation, and bone resorption, with a need for locational-, spatial- and cell-specific signalling pathways to mediate this co-ordination. We will discuss these processes, and a number of cell-signalling pathways identified in both murine and human genetic studies to regulate cortical bone mass, including signalling through gp130, STAT3, PTHR1, WNT16, NOTCH, NOTUM and sFRP4.
引用
收藏
页码:5755 / 5773
页数:18
相关论文
共 7 条
  • [1] Cortical bone development, maintenance and porosity: genetic alterations in humans and mice influencing chondrocytes, osteoclasts, osteoblasts and osteocytes
    Isojima, Tsuyoshi
    Sims, Natalie A.
    CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES, 2021, 78 (15) : 5755 - 5773
  • [2] Regulation of cortical and trabecular bone mass by communication between osteoblasts, osteocytes and osteoclasts
    Sims, Natalie A.
    Vrahnas, Christina
    ARCHIVES OF BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS, 2014, 561 : 22 - 28
  • [3] Dysapoptosis of Osteoblasts and Osteocytes Increases Cancellous Bone Formation But Exaggerates Cortical Porosity With Age
    Jilka, Robert L.
    O'Brien, Charles A.
    Roberson, Paula K.
    Bonewald, Lynda F.
    Weinstein, Robert S.
    Manolagas, Stavros C.
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2014, 29 (01) : 103 - 117
  • [4] Deletion of vitamin D receptor in mature osteoblasts and osteocytes, but not osteoclasts, impairs bone turnover in growing mice
    Morris, Howard
    Anderson, Paul
    Starczak, Yolandi
    Ryan, Jackson
    Tsangari, Helen
    Sawyer, Rebecca
    Barratt, Kate
    Turner, Andrew
    Atkins, Gerald
    Davey, Rachel
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2013, 28
  • [5] FRA-2 is a novel regulator of bone development affecting osteoclasts, osteoblasts and chondrocytes
    Bozec, A
    Hoebertz, A
    Schilling, AF
    Karreth, F
    Scheuch, H
    Priemel, M
    Amling, M
    Eferl, R
    Wagner, EF
    BONE, 2006, 38 (03) : S9 - S9
  • [6] Sclerostin Immunoreactivity Increases in Cortical Bone Osteocytes and Decreases in Articular Cartilage Chondrocytes in Aging Mice
    Thompson, Michelle L.
    Miguel Jimenez-Andrade, Juan
    Mantyh, Patrick W.
    JOURNAL OF HISTOCHEMISTRY & CYTOCHEMISTRY, 2016, 64 (03) : 179 - 189
  • [7] Chondrocytes Transdifferentiate into Osteoblasts in Endochondral Bone during Development, Postnatal Growth and Fracture Healing in Mice
    Zhou, Xin
    von der Mark, Klaus
    Henry, Stephen
    Norton, William
    Adams, Henry
    de Crombrugghe, Benoit
    PLOS GENETICS, 2014, 10 (12)