Literature DB >> 21597267

Poorly ordered bone as an endogenous scaffold for the deposition of highly oriented lamellar tissue in rapidly growing ovine bone.

Michael Kerschnitzki1, Wolfgang Wagermaier, Yifei Liu, Paul Roschger, Georg N Duda, Peter Fratzl.   

Abstract

The mechanical properties of bone are known to depend on its structure at all length scales. In large animals, such as sheep, cortical bone grows very quickly and it is known that this occurs in 2 stages whereby a poorly ordered (mostly woven) bone structure is initially deposited and later augmented and partially replaced by parallel fibered and lamellar bone with much improved mechanical properties, often called primary osteons. Most interestingly, a similar sequence of events has also recently been observed during callus formation in a sheep osteotomy model. This has prompted the idea that fast intramembranous bone formation requires an intermediate step where bone with a lower degree of collagen orientation is deposited first as a substrate for osteoblasts to coordinate the synthesis of lamellar tissue. Since some osteoblasts become embedded in the mineralizing collagen matrix which they synthesize, the resulting osteocyte network is a direct image of the location of osteoblasts during bone formation. Using 3-dimensional imaging of osteocyte networks as well as tissue characterization by polarized light microscopy and backscattered electron imaging, we revisit the structure of growing plexiform (fibrolamellar) bone and callus in sheep. We show that bone deposited initially is based on osteocytes without spatial correlation and encased in poorly ordered matrix. Bone deposited on top of this has lamellar collagen orientation as well as a layered arrangement of osteocytes, both parallel to the surfaces of the initial tissue. This supports the hypothesis that the initial bone constitutes an endogenous scaffold for the subsequent deposition of parallel fibered and lamellar bone.
Copyright © 2011 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21597267     DOI: 10.1159/000324467

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cells Tissues Organs        ISSN: 1422-6405            Impact factor:   2.481


  11 in total

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8.  Microfibril orientation dominates the microelastic properties of human bone tissue at the lamellar length scale.

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10.  Multiscale bone quality analysis in osteoarthritic knee joints reveal a role of the mechanosensory osteocyte network in osteophytes.

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