Mechanical Loading Stimulates Bone Formation by Reactivation of Bone Lining Cells in 13-Week-Old Rats
Open Access
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Bone and Mineral Research
- Vol. 13 (11) , 1760-1767
- https://doi.org/10.1359/jbmr.1998.13.11.1760
Abstract
The bone formation that occurs in response to mechanical stimulation is generally considered to be a means by which bone adapts to changes in its mechanical environment. We have previously shown that the expression of genes for bone matrix proteins is maximal 72 h after a single 5‐minute episode of loading of tail vertebrae of 13‐week‐old female rats, that the predominant increase in mineralization occurs after 3 days, and that the osteogenic response to mechanical stimulation is not dependent on prior bone resorption. We have now investigated the cellular correlates of this osteogenic response. No proliferation was detected, by pulse or flash labeling, in the trabecular bone surface cells of animals killed 1 h to 10 days after the loading episode. Ultrastructural examination revealed that most of the cells covering the trabecular bone surface of control vertebrae were flat bone lining cells. After mechanical stimulation, the trabecular bone surface cells developed ultrastructural features of osteoblastic differentiation and activity, with acquisition of an increasingly cuboidal shape, rounded nuclei, and abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum. Morphometric analysis of the mean cell area, mean nuclear area, and cell and nuclear height showed that they were all maximal 48 h after loading. By 120 h after loading, the appearances of bone surface cells had reverted to those of control vertebrae. Thus, mechanical loading appears to activate lining cells, with a temporal sequence that correlates with bone matrix production.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Calculation of active formation period using label escape and three labelsBone, 1993
- Osteoblast density and the evolution of BMUs in vertebral osteoporosisBone, 1993
- Induction of bone formation in rat tail vertebrae by mechanical loadingBone and Mineral, 1993
- The success and failure of the adaptive response to functional load-bearing in averting bone fractureBone, 1992
- A noninvasive, in vivo model for studying strain adaptive bone modelingBone, 1991
- Resorption is not essential for the stimulation of bone growth by hPTH-(1-34) in rats in vivoJournal of Bone and Mineral Research, 1989
- The proliferation and differentiation of the bone-lining cell in estrogen-induced osteogenesisBone, 1986
- A Determinant of Bone ArchitectureClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1983
- A cellular investment of bone marrowThe Anatomical Record, 1982
- Bone growth kinetics III. A biorhythm in bone growth in the rabbitThe Journal of Pathology, 1974