Growth of the Clavicle and Development of Clavicular Secondary Cartilage in the Embryonic Mouse
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Cells Tissues Organs
- Vol. 135 (3) , 200-207
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000146754
Abstract
Whether secondary cartilage develops in the mammalian clavicle has been a matter of controversy. This study documents, in the embryonic mouse: (a) the onset of clavicular osteogenesis at 14 days of gestation (Theiler stage 22); (b) the appearance of secondary cartilage at 16 days of gestation (Theiler stage 24) and its persistence as a prominent cartilage until 18 days of gestation; (c) that the relative growth rate of the clavicle is much higher (0.097 mg/g body weight/day) between 16 and 17 days of gestation than at later ages (mean of 0.005 mg/g/day between 17 days of gestation and 4 days postnatally), and (d) that secondary cartilage failed to form in clavicles from 15-day-old embryos maintained in vitro. We conclude that secondary cartilage is a feature of the developing mouse clavicle, that it arises when the relative growth rate of the clavicle is highest, and that the most likely stimulus for differentiation of this cartilage is mechanical, muscle-based and associated with rapid relative clavicular growth.Keywords
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