Histochem Cell Biol
February 1999
Estrogen deficiency at the menopause is associated with an increased rate of bone loss and subsequent risk of skeletal fracture. Whilst cells of the osteoblastic lineage are known to express estrogen receptors, the presence of estrogen receptors in osteoclasts remains controversial. We have examined expression of the classic estrogen receptor, estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha), during osteoclast differentiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCalcif Tissue Int
September 1998
Bisphosphonates (BPs) are potent inhibitors of bone resorption and are therapeutically effective in disease of increased bone turnover, but their mechanism(s) of action remain to be elucidated. Using as experimental model human osteoclast-like cell lines derived from giant cell tumors of bone, extensively characterized for their osteoclast features, we investigated the adhesive properties of osteoclasts on bone slices and on different proteins of the extracellular matrix in the presence of BPs. Adhesion assays using bone slices pretreated with ALN, at the established active concentration, showed that, although the morphology of osteoclasts plated onto pretreated bone slices was not modified, the number of adherent cells was reduced by the treatment of about 50% vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLichenoid lesions of the skin are characterized by a band-like dermal inflammatory infiltrate and structural alterations of the basement membrane (BM). The etiopathogenesis of these lesions, of which lichen planus (LP) is perhaps the prototypic example, is unknown. Acute cases of LP are accompanied by the destruction of epidermal BM, degeneration of basal keratinocytes with loss of tonofilaments and hemidesmosomes, vesicular alterations, and even blister formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated the ionic requirements for the early events of cell-extracellular matrix interactions leading to cell spreading. We found that potassium ions were required specifically in several cell types. Adhesion to fibronectin- (FN) coated surfaces was independent of K+ in the medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCells harvested from 12 human giant cell tumors of bone and kept in culture for several passages were characterized for bone-resorbing capability, total and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity, response to the calciotropic hormone calcitonin, cell proliferation, multinucleation after passages, and presence of calcium sensing. Cells obtained from three tumors presented a complete panel of osteoclast characteristics and maintained their multinuclearity after several passages. Cells from four other tumors increased their cAMP levels after treatment with calcitonin, and the other five apparently consisted of cells of stromal origin.
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