Vis-à-Vis Cells and the Priming of Bone Formation
- 1 December 1998
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Bone and Mineral Research
- Vol. 13 (12) , 1852-1861
- https://doi.org/10.1359/jbmr.1998.13.12.1852
Abstract
Bone formation throughout skeletal growth and remodeling always entails deposition of new bone onto a pre-existing mineralized surface. In contrast, the initial deposition of bone in development requires the formation, ex novo, of the first mineralized structure in a nonmineralized tissue. We investigated the cellular events associated with this initial bone formation, with specific reference to the respective role of cartilage and bone cells in bones which form via a cartilage model. The cellular architecture of initial osteogenic sites was investigated by light, confocal, and electron microscopy (EM) in the membranous ossification of fetal calvarial bones (not forming via a cartilage model) and in the membranous ossification of the bony collars of endochondral bones. Bone sialoprotein (BSP), which is expressed during early phases of bone deposition and has been proposed to be involved in the control of both mineral formation and bone cell-matrix interactions, was used as a marker of initial bone formation. We found that at all sites, BSP-producing cells (as identified by intracellular immunoreactivity) are arranged in a characteristic vis-à-vis (face to face) pattern prior to the appearance of the first mineralizing BSP-immunoreactive extracellular matrix. In perichondral osteogenesis, the vis-à-vis pattern comprises osteoblasts differentiating from the perichondrium/periosteum and early hypertrophic chondrocytes located at the lateral aspects of the rudiment. By EM, the first mineral and the first BSP-immunoreactive sites coincide temporally and spatially in the extracellular matrix at the boundary between cartilage and periosteum. We further showed that in an in vitro avian model of chondrocyte differentiation in vitro to osteoblast-like cells, early hypertrophic chondrocytes replated as adherent cells turned on the expression of high levels of BSP in conjunction with the switch to collagen type I synthesis and matrix mineralization. We propose a model for the priming of bone deposition, i.e., the formation of the first bone structure, in which the architectural layout of cells competent to deposit a mineralizing matrix (the vis-à-vis pattern) determines the polarized deposition of bone. For bones forming via a cartilage model, the priming of bone deposition involves and requires cells that differentiate from early hypertrophic chondrocytesKeywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bone DevelopmentPublished by Wiley ,2007
- Bcl-2 Lies Downstream of Parathyroid Hormone–related Peptide in a Signaling Pathway That Regulates Chondrocyte Maturation during Skeletal DevelopmentThe Journal of cell biology, 1997
- Bone sialoprotein (BSP) secretion and osteoblast differentiation: relationship to bromodeoxyuridine incorporation, alkaline phosphatase, and matrix deposition.Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 1993
- Hypertrophic chondrocytes undergo further differentiation in cultureThe Journal of cell biology, 1992
- Polarized expression of integrin receptors (alpha 6 beta 4, alpha 2 beta 1, alpha 3 beta 1, and alpha v beta 5) and their relationship with the cytoskeleton and basement membrane matrix in cultured human keratinocytes.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Cellular and Molecular Events During Embryonic Bone DevelopmentConnective Tissue Research, 1989
- Developmentally regulated synthesis of a low molecular weight protein (Ch 21) by differentiating chondrocytes.The Journal of cell biology, 1988
- Type X collagen synthesis during in vitro development of chick embryo tibial chondrocytes.The Journal of cell biology, 1986
- Morphological and histochemical events during first bone formation in embryonic chick limbsBone, 1986
- Morphology of bone development and bone remodeling in embryonic chick limbsBone, 1986