| Literature DB >> 28084694 |
Petar Milovanovic1,2, Elizabeth A Zimmermann1, Annika Vom Scheidt1, Björn Hoffmann3,4, George Sarau3, Timur Yorgan1, Michaela Schweizer5, Michael Amling1, Silke Christiansen3,6,7, Björn Busse1,8.
Abstract
Osteocytes-the central regulators of bone remodeling-are enclosed in a network of microcavities (lacunae) and nanocanals (canaliculi) pervading the mineralized bone. In a hitherto obscure process related to aging and disease, local plugs in the lacuno-canalicular network disrupt cellular communication and impede bone homeostasis. By utilizing a suite of high-resolution imaging and physics-based techniques, it is shown here that the local plugs develop by accumulation and fusion of calcified nanospherites in lacunae and canaliculi (micropetrosis). Two distinctive nanospherites phenotypes are found to originate from different osteocytic elements. A substantial deviation in the spherites' composition in comparison to mineralized bone further suggests a mineralization process unlike regular bone mineralization. Clearly, mineralization of osteocyte lacunae qualifies as a strong marker for degrading bone material quality in skeletal aging. The understanding of micropetrosis may guide future therapeutics toward preserving osteocyte viability to maintain mechanical competence and fracture resistance of bone in elderly individuals.Entities:
Keywords: biomineralization; bone cells; lacuno-canalicular network; nanospherites; osteocytes
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28084694 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201602215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281