Você está no menu de acessibilidade

Utilize este identificador para citar ou criar um link para este item: http://acervodigital.unesp.br/handle/11449/116196
Título: 
M-CSF Priming of Osteoclast Precursors Can Cause Osteoclastogenesis-Insensitivity, Which Can be Prevented and Overcome on Bone
Autor(es): 
Instituição: 
  • Vrije Univ Amsterdam
  • Radboud Univ Nijmegen
  • Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
  • Univ Amsterdam
  • Univ Med Ctr
ISSN: 
0021-9541
Resumo: 
Osteoclasts and macrophages share progenitors that must receive decisive lineage signals driving them into their respective differentiation routes. Macrophage colony stimulation factor M-CSF is a common factor; bone is likely the stimulus for osteoclast differentiation. To elucidate the effect of both, shared mouse bone marrow precursor myeloid blast was pre-cultured with M-CSF on plastic and on bone. M-CSF priming prior to stimulation with M-CSF and osteoclast differentiation factor RANKL resulted in a complete loss of osteoclastogenic potential without bone. Such M-CSF primed cells expressed the receptor RANK, but lacked the crucial osteoclastogenic transcription factor NFATc1. This coincided with a steeply decreased expression of osteoclast genes TRACP and DC-STAMP, but an increased expression of the macrophage markers F4/80 and CD11b. Compellingly, M-CSF priming on bone accelerated the osteoclastogenic potential: M-CSF primed cells that had received only one day M-CSF and RANKL and were grown on bone already expressed an array of genes that are associated with osteoclast differentiation and these cells differentiated into osteoclasts within 2 days. Osteoclastogenesis-insensitive precursors grown in the absence of bone regained their osteoclastogenic potential when transferred to bone. This implies that adhesion to bone dictates the fate of osteoclast precursors. Common macrophage-osteoclast precursors may become insensitive to differentiate into osteoclasts and regain osteoclastogenesis when bound to bone or when in the vicinity of bone. J. Cell. Physiol. 229: 210-225, 2014. (c) 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Data de publicação: 
1-Jan-2015
Citação: 
Journal Of Cellular Physiology. Hoboken: Wiley-blackwell, v. 230, n. 1, p. 210-225, 2015.
Duração: 
210-225
Publicador: 
Wiley-Blackwell
Fonte: 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcp.24702
Endereço permanente: 
Direitos de acesso: 
Acesso restrito
Tipo: 
outro
Fonte completa:
http://repositorio.unesp.br/handle/11449/116196
Aparece nas coleções:Artigos, TCCs, Teses e Dissertações da Unesp

Não há nenhum arquivo associado com este item.
 

Itens do Acervo digital da UNESP são protegidos por direitos autorais reservados a menos que seja expresso o contrário.