Recruitment of osteoclasts in the mandibular condyle of growing osteopetrotic (op/op) mice after a single injection of macrophage colony-stimulating factor
T. Kawata et al., Recruitment of osteoclasts in the mandibular condyle of growing osteopetrotic (op/op) mice after a single injection of macrophage colony-stimulating factor, ARCH ORAL B, 44(1), 1999, pp. 81-88
The purpose was to elucidate histological changes in the mandibular condyle
and ramus in growing osteopetrotic (op/op) mice after a single injection o
f macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF). M-CSF (5 mu g) was injected
into 6-, 11-, 26-, 56- and 86-day-old op/op mice, and the mice were killed
4 days after the injection. In normal mice, the condyle was substantially
wider than the ramus beneath it, and enlargement and ossification of the co
ndyle occurred after weaning. These changes were not found in the uninjecte
d and injected op/op mice, the condyles of which were occupied by hypertrop
hic cartilage cells, and the hypertrophic cell layer was thicker and more i
rregular in the arrangement of epiphyseal cell columns. In spite of the lac
k of bone resorption in uninjected and injected op/op mice. ossification of
the mandibular ramus occurred, but later than that of normal mouse. The nu
mber of tartrate-resistant acid phophatase-positive cells in the injected o
p/op, and normal mice approached a maximum at 30 days and then gradually de
creased up to 90 days of age, although the numbers were substantially diffe
rent for all ages. The uninjected op/op mice had no visible osteoclasts unt
il 15 days and their number then increased significantly from 60 to 90 days
of age. These results were considered due to the difference in biological
responses of bony structures to M-CSF injection in the op/op mice. The infl
uences of mechanical stimuli from masticatory functions. which are deficien
t in op/op mice, might also be responsible for the differences in bony arch
itecture between the op/op and normal mice. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd.
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