The origin and fate of osteoclasts
β Scribed by Hall, Brian K.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1975
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 896 KB
- Volume
- 183
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-276X
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Despite intensive and ingenious investigation, the origins and ultimate fate of the osteoclast remain shrouded in mystery. This brief review evaluates some of the recent experimental approaches used in the study of the osteoclast, especially whether they form from intraβ or extraβskeletal progenitor cells, whether from the same osteoprogenitor cell as the osteoblast, and whether, once formed, they may modulate to osteoblasts.
That osteoprogenitor cells can, and do, become osteoclasts is well founded, as is the conclusion that such progenitor cells originate as bloodβborne, extraskeletal cells. Evidence that sessile, intraβskeletal, progenitor cells can form osteoclasts is less direct. There is good evidence that osteoclasts both shed and takeβup nuclei, but no direct evidence that nuclear shedding is accompanied by death of the osteoclast, and no direct evidence for the fate of the shed nuclei. Whether the same osteoprogenitor cell can produce either an osteoblast or an osteoclast also remains an open question.
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## Abstract Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells that derive from hematopoietic progenitors in the bone marrow which also give rise to monocytes in peripheral blood, and to the various types of tissue macrophages. Osteoclasts are formed by the fusion of precursor cells. They function in bone resorp
## Abstract The article to which this erratum refers was published in J Cell Biochem (2007) 102: 1130β1139. Β© 2007 WileyβLiss, Inc.