CELL PROLIFERATION AND SPECIALIZATION DURING ENDOCHONDRAL OSTEOGENESIS IN YOUNG RATS
Open Access
- 1 September 1962
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 14 (3) , 357-370
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.14.3.357
Abstract
Endochondral osteogenesis was studied autoradiographically in ribs and tibiae of 32 Long-Evans rats injected with 1 µc/gm H3-thymidine at 6 days of age and sacrificed at intervals between 1 hour and 2 weeks later. Proliferation and specialization of bone cells were studied by analyses of (a) the percentage of mitoses which were labeled, (b) the percentage of labeled nuclei in bone cells, and (c) grain counts. The following conclusions were derived: The various types of bone cells represent different functional states of the same cell. Cell division is usually restricted to cells in the morphologically unspecialized "osteoprogenitor" state. Specialized bone cells arise by modulation of osteoprogenitor cells. The average cell generation time is shortest in the metaphysis, longest in the periosteum, and intermediate in the endosteum. The average duration of DNA synthesis is relatively constant (about 8 hours). With increasing length of generation time there is a slight increase in G2 + mitosis, but the major change is a lengthening of G1. After dividing, cells in the osteoprogenitor state may remain within the progenitor pool or undergo modulation of cell type, specializing as osteoblasts or becoming incorporated in osteoclasts.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Autoradiographic studies on postnatal growth of the skull in young rats injected with tritiated glycineThe Anatomical Record, 1962
- The use of tritiated thymidine for marking migratory cellsExperimental Cell Research, 1961
- THE CELLULAR COMPLEMENT OF THE SKELETAL SYSTEM STUDIED AUTORADIOGRAPHICALLY WITH TRITIATED THYMIDINE (H3TDR) DURING GROWTH AND AGINGThe Journal of cell biology, 1961
- Use of Tritiated Thymidine for the Study of the Origin of the OsteoclastNature, 1961
- Cell proliferation and migration as revealed by radioautography after injection of thymidine‐H3 into male rats and miceJournal of Anatomy, 1960
- Some Characteristics of DNA Synthesis and the Mitotic Cycle in Ehrlich Ascites Tumor CellsThe Journal of cell biology, 1960
- Periosteal Osteoclasts, Skeletal Development and AgeingNature, 1960
- SPECIFICITY OF LABELLED THYMIDINE AS A DEOXYRIBONUCLEIC ACID PRECURSOR IN RADIOAUTOGRAPHYJournal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1959
- CELLULAR PROLIFERATION IN THE MOUSE AS REVEALED BY AUTORADIOGRAPHY WITH TRITIATED THYMIDINEProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1958
- Cellular transformations in mammalian bones induced by parathyroid extractJournal of Anatomy, 1950