## Abstract Aseptic implant loosening of total joint replacements often results from particleβmediated bone loss, which may be a combined effect of osteolysis and suppressed bone formation. Bone regeneration in the prosthetic bed depends on the activity of osteoblasts and their differentiation from
Osteoprogenitor cell differentiation to mature bone-forming osteoblasts
β Scribed by Jane E. Aubin; Johan N.M. Heersche
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 163 KB
- Volume
- 49
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0272-4391
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Osteoblasts are the skeletal cells responsible for synthesis, deposition and mineralization of the extracellular matrix of bone. By mechanisms that are only beginning to be understood, stem cells, primitive osteoprogenitors and related mesenchymal precursors arise in the embryo where they participate in development of the skeleton; at least some persist in the adult organism, where they contribute to replacement of osteoblasts in bone turnover and in fracture healing. However, many questions remain as to the nature of these precursor cell pools, including which cells constitute a stem cell pool vs. a committed progenitor pool, which pools persist in adult life and which constitute targets for hormones, cytokines, and growth factors during bone formation, turnover, and repair. During osteoprogenitor proliferation and differentiation, a series of cellular and molecular events occur that are characterized by sequential up-and downregulation of osteoblast-associated genes, including those for specific transcription factors, cell cyclerelated proteins, adhesion molecules, and matrix proteins; together these result in a mature matrix-synthesizing osteoblast. However, the mature osteoblast phenotype is itself heterogeneous, with subpopulations of osteoblasts expressing only subsets of the known osteoblast markers, raising intriguing questions, including how different pools of osteoblasts or their precursors may respond to therapeutic agents.
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