Publications by authors named "L Hainey"

Oestrogen is recognized as important for maintaining bone mass in men and women. Oestrogen receptor (ER) alpha and the recently described ER-beta are both expressed in bone cells, but have different affinities for oestrogen agonists and plant oestrogens, which could be important in developing treatments for bone loss in both men and women. It is unclear, however, which isoform predominates in bone; cell type and age may influence their relative expression.

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Evidence suggests that the newly described estrogen receptor beta (ER-beta) may be important for estrogen (17beta-estradiol) action on the skeleton, but its cellular localization in adult human bone requires clarification. We addressed this by using indirect immunoperoxidase with a novel affinity purified polyclonal antibody to human ER-beta, raised to hinge domain (D) sequences from the human receptor. Bone was demineralized in 20% EDTA and all biopsy specimens were formalin-fixed and wax-embedded.

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Investigation of osteoblast dysfunction in osteoporosis has been hampered by a poor understanding of normal early osteoblast differentiation, due to a relative lack of markers for the earliest cells in the lineage. Attempts to identify such markers have used cultures of animal or immortalized human cells, of uncertain relevance to human biology, or heterogeneous cultures in which genetic variability precludes the isolation of stage-specific genotypic markers. Primary in vitro generation of clonal populations of human bone marrow stromal cells was used in order to overcome these problems.

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