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Gina B. Di Gregorio, Matsuo Yamamoto, A. Afshan Ali, Etsuko Abe, Paula Roberson, Stavros C. Manolagas, Robert L. Jilka
Published in Volume 107, Issue 7
J Clin Invest. 2001; 107(7):803–812 doi:10.1172/JCI11653
Abstract | Full text | PDF
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Figure 8

Regulation of osteoblast formation by estrogens. Mesenchymal stem cells (white) with high self-renewal capacity (solid arrow) give rise to early transit-amplifying osteoblast progenitors (blue) with limited self-renewal capacity (dashed arrow). The latter differentiate into late transit-amplifying progenitors lacking self-renewal capability (green). Subsequently, late transit-amplifying cells develop into committed osteoblast progenitors (gray) that eventually give rise to fully differentiated osteoblasts (magenta). Estrogens (E2) suppress the self-renewal of early transit-amplifying progenitors. See text for additional details.