Results 351 to 360 of about 182,622 (382)
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Histogenesis of Osteoclasts

Journal of Dental Research, 1966
SYNOPSIS IN INTERLINGUA HISTOGENESE DE OSTEOCLASTAS.— Rattos blanc esseva subjicite a duo injectiones de 200 unitates de Parathormon con un intervallo de 12 horas. Tres horas post le prime injection, thymidina a tritium esseva administrate. Autoradiogrammas del maxillas esseva preparate ab specimens colligite inter hora 6 e hora 72 a partir del ...
Patrick D. Toto, John J. Magon
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Glucocorticoids and the Osteoclast

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2007
Abstract:  Glucocorticoid (GC)‐induced bone loss is the most common cause of secondary osteoporosis but its pathogenesis is controversial. GCs clearly suppress bone formation in vivo but the means by which they impact osteoblasts is unclear. Because bone remodeling is characterized by tethering of the activities of the two cells, the osteoclast is a ...
Haibo Zhao   +7 more
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Both aerobic glycolysis and mitochondrial respiration are required for osteoclast differentiation

The FASEB Journal, 2020
Excessive bone resorption over bone formation is the root cause for bone loss leading to osteoporotic fractures. Development of new antiresorptive therapies calls for a holistic understanding of osteoclast differentiation and function.
Boer Li   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

THE OSTEOCLAST

Biological Reviews, 1949
SummaryOsteoclasts, Kölliker's universal agent of bone destruction, must still be regarded as enigmatical structures. It is likely that their life span is limited to a few days. Regarded by some as resulting from fusion of relatively immobile individuals of connective tissue type, and by others of mobile cells such as macrophages, it seems a ...
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Osteoclasts and Integrins [PDF]

open access: possibleAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2006
Abstract:  The osteoclast is the unique bone resorptive cell that accomplishes its mission by forming an isolated acidified microenvironment between itself and the bone surface. Creation of this compartment is the first step in bone degradation and establishes that an intimate physical relationship must exist between the osteoclast and bone.
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The birth of the osteoclast

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2010
Thirty‐five years ago it had become clear that the osteoclast was not a bone cell but an immigrant into bone, derived from the hemopoietic system. Among hemopoietic cells, mononuclear phagocytes seemed the most likely precursors. However, for the progeny of wandering cells such as those to achieve nonrandom localization implies control by the local ...
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Multinuclearity of Osteoclasts

Nature, 1963
THE origin and function of the multinuclear osteoclast cell are of continuing interest among contemporary investigators, and have a long history among investigations on amphibian regeneration1,2.
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Generation of Osteoclasts In Vitro, and Assay of Osteoclast Activity

2007
Osteoclasts are bone-resorbing multinucleated cells derived from the monocyte-macrophage lineage. The authors have developed a mouse marrow culture system and a coculture system of mouse osteoblasts and hemopoietic cells, in which osteoclasts are formed in response to various osteotropic factors such as 1alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, parathyroid ...
Nobuyuki Udagawa   +3 more
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The osteoclast and periodontitis

Journal of Clinical Periodontology, 1986
Abstract. The osteoclast may play an important rô le in the variable rate of osseous destruction seen in periodontitis. Current understanding of various aspects of the osteoclast may help explain this fact. This review paper will first look at two theories of cell origin of the osteoclast: the multipotential osteoprogenitor cell theory and the ...
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Long bone osteoclasts display an augmented osteoclast phenotype compared to calvarial osteoclasts

Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 2010
Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells specialized in degrading bone and characterized by high expression of the enzymes tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) and cathepsin K (CtsK). Recent studies show that osteoclasts exhibit phenotypic differences depending on their anatomical site of action.
Göran Andersson   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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