Literature DB >> 9267693

Pathogenesis of vitamin (A and D)-induced premature growth-plate closure in calves.

J C Woodard1, G A Donovan, L W Fisher.   

Abstract

The pathogenesis of vitamin A-induced premature growth-plate closure was investigated in calves. A progressive increase in the severity of growth-plate lesions with time and a progressive increase in the extent of growth-plate involvement was observed. There was initial loss of metachromasia from the growth plate in a region that formed a narrow horizontal band of cartilage composed of the epiphyseal growth zone and a strip of reserve-zone cartilage. Immunostaining revealed there was loss of aggrecan, decorin, and biglycan from this region; however, it was doubtful that the regional loss of proteoglycan was a major contributing factor in the pathogenesis of premature growth-plate closure. This is because this region was the vestige of cartilage that remained when growth-plate closure was almost complete. The major alteration was premature mineralization of columnar cartilage and subsequent endochondral ossification. This caused the depth of the columnar zone to be reduced. Columnar-zone cartilage cells appeared immature where the matrix became mineralized and lacked the morphology of hypertrophic chondrocytes. The depth of the reserve-cartilage zone also was reduced as matrix mineralization of the columnar zone progressed, and further reduction in columnar cartilage depth occurred. Eventually, there was matrix mineralization within the adjacent reserve cartilage. The distribution of reaction product after immunostaining with antibodies to the following proteins was described during normal endochondral ossification: aggrecan, decorin, biglycan, versican, type I collagen propeptide, type I collagen, type II collagen, osteopontin, osteocalcin, osteonectin, bone sialoprotein, and alkaline phosphatase. Biglycan, type I collagen propeptide, type I collagen, osteopontin, osteocalcin, osteonectin, bone sialoprotein, and alkaline phosphatase were localized within the cytoplasm or surrounding matrix of hypertrophic chondrocytes. In vitamin-treated calves, these same proteins were found in regions undergoing premature matrix mineralization even though the chondrocytes did not have a hypertrophic morphology. Therefore, vitamin treatment did not cause just a selective expression, but it caused expression of a large number of matrix proteins normally associated with the hypertrophic chondrocyte phenotype. Finally, completely mineralized columnar and reserve cartilage were removed by a modeling/remodeling process similar to that seen in the metaphysis.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9267693     DOI: 10.1016/s8756-3282(97)00099-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bone        ISSN: 1873-2763            Impact factor:   4.398


  7 in total

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Authors:  Serafim M Oliveira; Rushali A Ringshia; Racquel Z Legeros; Elizabeth Clark; Michael J Yost; Louis Terracio; Cristina C Teixeira
Journal:  J Biomed Mater Res A       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 4.396

2.  Evaluating growth failure with diffusion tensor imaging in pediatric survivors of high-risk neuroblastoma treated with high-dose cis-retinoic acid.

Authors:  Jorge Delgado; Diego Jaramillo; Nancy A Chauvin; Michelle Guo; Mackenzie S Stratton; Hannah E Sweeney; Christian A Barrera; Sogol Mostoufi-Moab
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2019-05-04

Review 3.  Hypervitaminosis A-induced premature closure of epiphyses (physeal obliteration) in humans and calves (hyena disease): a historical review of the human and veterinary literature.

Authors:  Alexis B Rothenberg; Walter E Berdon; J Carroll Woodard; Robert A Cowles
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2007-10-02

4.  Matrix and gene expression in the rat cranial base growth plate.

Authors:  Minghui Tang; Jeremy J Mao
Journal:  Cell Tissue Res       Date:  2006-03-07       Impact factor: 5.249

Review 5.  Bone physiology as inspiration for tissue regenerative therapies.

Authors:  Diana Lopes; Cláudia Martins-Cruz; Mariana B Oliveira; João F Mano
Journal:  Biomaterials       Date:  2018-09-17       Impact factor: 12.479

6.  Histological Analysis of Bone Repair in Mandibular Body Osteotomy Using Internal Fixation System in Three Different Gaps without Bone Graft in an Animal Model.

Authors:  Sergio Olate; Bélgica Vásquez; Cristian Sandoval; Adriana Vasconcellos; Juan Pablo Alister; Mariano Del Sol
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2019-07-24       Impact factor: 3.411

7.  Accelerated growth plate mineralization and foreshortened proximal limb bones in fetuin-A knockout mice.

Authors:  Jong Seto; Björn Busse; Himadri S Gupta; Cora Schäfer; Stefanie Krauss; John W C Dunlop; Admir Masic; Michael Kerschnitzki; Paul Zaslansky; Peter Boesecke; Philip Catalá-Lehnen; Thorsten Schinke; Peter Fratzl; Willi Jahnen-Dechent
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-10-16       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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