| Literature DB >> 1422952 |
G Zaman1, S L Dallas, L E Lanyon.
Abstract
Pairs of 17-day embryonic chick tibiotarsi were removed and maintained in organ culture. One of each pair was subjected to a single 20-minute period of intermittent loading at 0.4 Hz, producing peak longitudinal compressive strains of 650 microstrain (mu epsilon). In the 18-hour culture period following loading, alkaline phosphatase levels in the osteoblasts of the loaded tibiotarsi were maintained whereas in controls they declined. In situ hybridization using a collagen type I cRNA riboprobe showed a substantial increase in expression of mRNA for collagen type I in the periosteal tissue of bones that were cultured for 18 hours after loading compared with that in similarly cultured controls and bones cultured for 4 hours. These results demonstrate that appropriate loading of embryonic chick bones in organ culture elicits adaptive regulation of matrix synthesis as evidenced by increased expression of the gene for type I collagen and alkaline phosphatase activity. This model may be useful as it must contain all the obligatory steps between strain change in the matrix and modified osteogenic activity.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1422952 DOI: 10.1007/bf00298501
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Calcif Tissue Int ISSN: 0171-967X Impact factor: 4.333