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Lane N E - - 2002
Rheumatic disease patients often have both systemic and localized inflammatory processes. The result of this inflammation is tissue destruction and this translates into bone loss. Recent studies have highlighted the importance of systemic factors that either directly or indirectly activate receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappaB ligand (RANKL) dependent osteoclast activation ...
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Marie P J - - 2002
The formation of cranial bone requires the differentiation of osteoblasts from undifferentiated mesenchymal cells. The balance between osteoblast recruitment, proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis in sutures between cranial bones is essential for calvarial bone formation. The mechanisms that control human osteoblasts during normal calvarial bone formation and premature suture ossification (craniosynostosis) ...
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Hofbauer Lorenz C - - 2002
Receptor activator of NF-kappaB (RANK) ligand (RANKL) and osteoprotegerin (OPG) play essential roles in bone metabolism and immune responses. RANKL activates RANK, which is expressed by osteoclasts and dendritic cells (DC), whereas OPG acts as its decoy receptor. The role of RANKL and OPG in thyroid physiology is unclear. Northern ...
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Vermes C - - 2001
Limited information is available on the responses of osteoblasts to wear debris, corrosion products, and cytokines and on the roles of altered osteoblast functions in the development of periprosthetic bone loss. Wear debris-challenged osteoblasts exhibit altered functions resulting in the loss of their capacity to produce bone matrix and to ...
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Jacobs J J - - 2001
Since the recognition of aseptic loosening by Charnley in the early 1960s, much information has been gained on the basic science of periprosthetic bone loss. Initially termed cement disease, it now generally is accepted that, in most instances, osteolysis is a manifestation of an adverse cellular response to phagocytosable particulate ...
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Boissy P - - 2001
We have shown that chick macrophages express RANK at their surface and human RANKL (hRANKL) triggers the formation of osteoclasts able to degrade dentine. As described for mammalian osteoclasts, hRANKL also stimulates the resorbing activity of chick bone-derived osteoclasts. In other hands, in culture, chick macrophages spontaneously form polykaryons sharing ...
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Theill Lars E - - 2002
TNF and TNFR family proteins play important roles in the control of cell death, proliferation, autoimmunity, the function of immune cells, or the organogenesis of lymphoid organs. Recently, novel members of this large family have been identified that have critical functions in immunity and that couple lymphoid cells with other ...
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Kazama J J - - 2001
Dialysis-related amyloid osteopathy (DRAO) is characterized by local osteoarticular lytic lesions, which sometimes cause a pathological fracture and reduce the quality of life in affected patients. In DRAO, active osteoclastic bone resorption is found at the bone surface facing the invaded synovial tissue and/or intervertebral disc, whereas reactive bone formation ...
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Itoh K - - 2001
Bone is a major storage site for TGFbeta superfamily members, including TGFbeta and bone morphogenetic proteins. It is believed that these cytokines are released from bone during bone resorption. Recent studies have shown that both RANKL and macrophage colony-stimulating factor are two essential factors produced by osteoblasts for inducing osteoclast ...
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Grcević D - - 2001
Functional interdependence between immune and bone systems is reflected in a number of regulatory molecules acting on the cells of both systems and common precursors for bone and immune cells. Therefore, the disturbances of the immune system may affect bone metabolism, and vice versa. This review addresses the roles of ...
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Bali J P - - 2001
BACKGROUND: Chondroitin sulfates (CS) are involved in articular metabolism and could be used as therapeutic agents in degenerative articular diseases. OBJECTIVES: To review the published reports describing both the metabolism of glycosaminoglycans (GAG) and their involvement in osteoarticular pathophysiology. METHODS: MEDLINE search for relevant articles and review of cited references. ...
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Papadaki H A - - 2001
There is strong evidence that non-immune chronic idiopathic neutropenia of adult is a cytokine-mediated syndrome characterized by (a) neutropenia of varying degree associated with a low number of lineage-specific CD34+ cells and increased production of inhibitors of hematopoiesis, including transforming growth factor-beta1 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha; (b) lymphopenia due to ...
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Hock J M - - 2001
With the discoveries of different death mechanisms, an emerging definition of apoptosis is the process of cell death associated with caspase activation or caspase-mediated cell death. This definition accepts that caspases represent the final common mechanistic pathway in apoptosis. Apoptosis may be triggered either by activation events that target mitochondria ...
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Cooper M S - - 2001
Tissue damage by proinflammatory cytokines is attenuated at both systemic and cellular levels by counter anti-inflammatory factors such as corticosteroids. Target cell responses to corticosteroids are dependent on several factors including prereceptor regulation via local steroidogenic enzymes. In particular, two isozymes of 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11beta-HSD), by interconverting hormonally active cortisol ...
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Karaplis A C - - 2001
Parathyroid hormone-related peptide (PTHrP) was discovered as the main mediator of humoral hypercalcemia associated with malignancy but is now known to be expressed by a variety of normal fetal and adult tissues. The amino-terminal region of PTHrP reveals limited but significant homology with parathyroid hormone (PTH), resulting in the interaction ...
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Schnell M A - - 2001
The innate immune response to intraportally infused adenoviral vector was evaluated in rhesus monkeys. A first-generation adenovirus-expressing lacZ (Ad-lacZ) was administered at a dose just below that which causes severe morbidity. The response to vector was evaluated for the initial 24 h following infusion. Clinical findings during this time were ...
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Jochum W - - 2001
Genetically modified mice have provided important insights into the biological functions of the dimeric transcription factor complex AP-1. Extensive analyses of mice and cells with genetically modified Fos or Jun proteins provide novel insights into the physiological functions of AP-1 proteins. Using knock-out strategies it was found that some components, ...
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Romanello M - - 2001
Bone-forming cells are organized in a multicellular network interconnected by gap junctions. Direct intercellular communication via gap junctions is an important component of bone homeostasis, coordinating cellular responses to external signals and promoting osteoblast differentiation. The cAMP pathway, a major intercellular signal transduction mechanism, regulates osteoblastic function and metabolism. We ...
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Collin-Osdoby P - - 2001
The receptor activator of NF-kappaB (RANKL) is the essential signal required for full osteoclast (OC) development, activation, and survival. RANKL is highly expressed in areas of trabecular bone remodeling and inflammatory bone loss, is increased on marrow stromal cells or osteoblasts by osteotropic hormones or cytokines, and is neutralized by ...
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Dreyer C W - - 2001
A dental hard tissue resorptive model was used to determine the periodontal ligament (PDL) distribution of lysosomal membrane antibody ED1 to cells of the macrophage-phagocyte lineage. Immunolabel was identified in mononuclear cells around inflammatory sites in the PDL, while multinuclear cells were labelled in resorption bays present in both bone ...
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Dvorakova M - - 2001
The v-myb(AMV) oncogene transforms myelomonocytic cells in vitro and induces acute monoblastic leukemia in chickens. We analyzed the activity of the evolutionarily conserved PEST-like domain (P1 domain) for biochemical and biological activities of v-Myb in ex vivo cultures and in vivo. Deletion of the P1 domain did not affect v-Myb ...
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Bendixen A C - - 2001
IL-4 is a pleiotropic immune cytokine secreted by activated T(H)2 cells that inhibits bone resorption both in vitro and in vivo. The cellular targets of IL-4 action as well as its intracellular mechanism of action remain to be determined. We show here that IL-4 inhibits receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand-induced ...
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Yun T J - - 2001
Osteoprotegerin (OPG) is a CD40-regulated gene in B cells and dendritic cells (DCs). We investigated the role of OPG in the immune system by generating opg(-/-) mice. Like its role as a regulator of bone metabolism, OPG also influences processes in the immune system, notably in B cell development. Ex ...
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Weitzmann M N - - 2001
In unstimulated conditions, osteoclast (OC) formation is regulated by stromal cell production of the key osteoclastogenic factors receptor activator of nuclear factor kappaB ligand (RANKL) and macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF). However, the mechanisms of accelerated osteoclastogenesis and bone loss characteristic of inflammatory conditions are poorly understood but appear to involve ...
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Tefferi A - - 2001
Chronic myeloproliferative disorders are operationally classified to include essential thrombocythemia, polycythemia vera, and agnogenic myeloid metaplasia. In most cases, clonal hematopoiesis, involving all 3 myeloid lineages, can be demonstrated. However, the underlying molecular lesions that are responsible for disease initiation and progression remain elusive. There are ongoing efforts to clarify ...
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Kanamaru Y - - 2001
Nitric oxide (NO) is a very small lipophilic molecule which rapidly diffuses and reaches the cytoplasmic components, and results in the activation of diverse biological function. It has been already reported that cultured osteoblasts synthesize NO in response to proinflammatory cytokines and lipopolysaccaride. In terms of the action of NO ...
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Koenderman L - - 2001
Granulocytes play an important role in the host defense against invading microorganisms such as bacteria and fungi (1,2). For the killing reaction, these cells have an extensive machinery of cytotoxic effector mechanisms including phagocytosis, production of toxic oxygen metabolites, initiated by a membrane bound nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)oxidase, and ...
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Denhardt D T - - 2001
Osteopontin (OPN) is a glycosylated phosphoprotein found in all body fluids and in the proteinaceous matrix of mineralized tissues. It can function both as a cell attachment protein and as a cytokine, delivering signals to cells via a number of receptors including several integrins and CD44. Expression of OPN is ...
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Pavlin D - - 2001
Mechanical loading is an important regulatory factor in alveolar bone homeostasis, and plays an essential role in maintaining the structure and mass of the alveolar processes throughout lifetime. A better understanding of the cellular and molecular responses of periodontal cells is a prerequisite for further improvements of therapeutic approaches in ...
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Hussein M A - - 2001
Arsenic has been used as a medicinal for thousands of years. Several reports from China relative to its use mainly in acute promyelocytic leukemia, especially from the Shanghai group, has caused a resurgence in the investigation of the drug in the management of malignancies with focus on malignancies of hematologic ...
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Schmidt-Mende J - - 2000
The aim of this study was to investigate whether freeze-thawing of freshly isolated human mononuclear bone marrow cells (MNC) influences the integrity of apoptosis-related proteins as determined by immunoblot analyses. Our results show that bone marrow is more sensitive to this process than either myelomonocytoid leukemic P39 or Jurkat T-lymphocyte ...
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Barton B E - - 2000
Myeloma is a neoplasm thought to "home" to bone marrow. However, evidence for bone-marrow-specific receptors or adhesion molecules expressed on myeloma cells is scanty. Initial myeloma expansion is thought to be due to IL-6 and/or related cytokines. Previous determinations of cytokine expression in bone marrow were performed on bone marrow ...
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Kawamura C - - 2000
Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), members of the transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta superfamily, are a group of related proteins that are capable of inducing the formation of cartilage and bone but are now regarded as multifunctional cytokines. We show in this report a novel function of BMPs in hematopoietic cells: BMP-2 ...
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O'Brien C A - - 2000
Interleukin-6 (IL-6)-type cytokines stimulate osteoclast formation by activating the glycoprotein 130 (gp130) receptor subunit on stromal/osteoblastic cells, which in turn leads to signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3)-mediated expression of receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand (RANKL). Based on evidence that gp130 expression is regulated by a variety of ...
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Rauch F - - 2000
The Ilizarov method of limb lengthening makes use of the fact that osteogenesis is induced at an osteotomy site when distraction is applied. It is unknown at present how the mechanical forces created by distraction are translated into biological signals. Because bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) are potent inducers of osteogenesis ...
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Urayama S - - 2000
Vitamin K2 is used for the treatment of osteoporosis, but the precise mode of action is still not clear. We investigated the effects of vitamin K2 on apoptosis of human osteoblasts. Human osteoblastic cell line MG63 cells and human primary osteoblast-like cells obtained from bone fragments in corrective surgery were ...
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Mancini L - - 2000
Nitric oxide is a gas radical regulating cell behaviour in the cardiovascular, immune, and central nervous systems. It has now been established as an important signalling molecule in bone. However, the effects of this gas radical on osteoblastic function are still unclear; in fact, while NO seems to be involved ...
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Pyatt D W - - 2000
Dithiocarbamates (DTC), an important class of therapeutic and industrial chemicals, have alternatively been reported to be either beneficial or toxic to the hematopoietic and immune systems. In the present study, we investigated the potential of dimethyl- and diethyl-dithiocarbamate to alter clonogenic response of primary human CD34(+) bone marrow cells in ...
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Díaz A - - 2000
BACKGROUND: The cysteine proteinase cathepsin K has aroused intense interest as the main effector in the digestion of extracellular matrix during bone resorption by osteoclasts. The enzyme is not a housekeeping lysosomal hydrolase, but is instead expressed with striking specificity in osteoclasts. In this work, we present evidence for the ...
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Baker P J - - 2000
A network of cytokines and other soluble mediators unites the immune system and bone; bacterial infections induce immune responses which may perturb this network. Periodontal diseases are Gram-negative infections resulting in bone loss in the jaw. Evidence is presented that immune responses to these infections produces net resorption of bone.
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Stanislaus D - - 2000
Osteoblast differentiation and function can be studied in situ in the metaphysis of growing long bones. Proliferation and apoptosis dominate in the primary spongiosa subjacent to the growth plate, and differentiation and function dominate in the proximal metaphysis. Apoptosis of osteocytes dominates at the termination of the trabeculae in diaphyseal ...
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Cortizo A M - - 2000
Nitric oxide (NO) has been shown to act as a mediator of cytokines in bone tissue. We have previously demonstrated that vanadium compounds are insulin- and growth factor-mimetic compounds in osteoblasts in culture, although high doses are toxic to these cells. In this study, we measured NO production in two ...
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Shevde N K - - 2000
Loss of ovarian function following menopause results in a substantial increase in bone turnover and a critical imbalance between bone formation and resorption. This imbalance leads to a progressive loss of trabecular bone mass and eventually osteoporosis, in part the result of increased osteoclastogenesis. Enhanced formation of functional osteoclasts appears ...
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Hofmann W K - - 2000
Megakaryocytic proliferation and differentiation is typically abnormal in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). The underlying mechanisms for this finding are not known, but may involve defects at the level of the thrombopoietin-receptor (c-mpl) or post-receptor signaling pathways in megakaryocyte progenitor cells. Premature apoptosis of the bone marrow cells and inhibitory ...
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Richards C D - - 2000
The role of oncostatin M in bone metabolism is not clearly defined, and the actions of mouse oncostatin M (mOSM) on osteoclast development has not been previously determined. We therefore examined the ability of recombinant mOSM to stimulate osteoclast formation and activity using cocultures of murine calvaria and bone marrow ...
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Tucker K A - - 2000
Staphylococcus aureus invades osteoblasts and is the primary cause of osteomyelitis. This study examined the ability of S. aureus to induce apoptosis in a mouse osteoblast cell line. The presence of intracellular S. aureus was demonstrated by transmission electron microscopy. Light microscopy was utilized to examine morphological changes in the ...
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Helgason C D - - 2000
In this report, we demonstrate that the Src homology 2 domain-containing inositol-5-phosphatase (SHIP) plays a critical role in regulating both B cell development and responsiveness to antigen stimulation. SHIP(-/-) mice exhibit a transplantable alteration in B lymphoid development that results in reduced numbers of precursor B (fraction C) and immature ...
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Diefenderfer D L - - 2000
Multipotential mesenchymal stem cells capable of chondro-osseous induction contribute to the endochondral callus of healing fractured bone. Microvascular pericytes serving the role of multipotential mesenchymal stem cells are considered osteoprogenitors because they express type I collagen, alkaline phosphatase enzyme activity, osteocalcin immunoreactivity, and bone sialoprotein mRNA. Previous electron microscopic studies ...
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Grewal T S - - 2000
Regulation of bone formation is important in the pathogenesis of many conditions such as osteoporosis, fracture healing, and loosening of orthopedic implants. We have recently identified a novel rat cDNA (best5) by differential display PCR that is regulated during osteoblast differentiation and bone formation in vitro and in vivo. Expression ...
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Olmedo M L - - 2000
Some osteoblasts in the expanded population of periosteal cells that occurs following bone injury are removed from the callus by apoptosis. Our objective was to study whether the consequences of activation of the death program could include feedback control of the healing response. Transforming growth factor beta and interleukin-1beta were ...
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