Beate Lanske, Michael Amling, Lynn Neff, Jennifer Guiducci, Roland Baron, Henry M. Kronenberg
J Clin Invest.
1999;
104(4):399–407
doi:10.1172/JCI6629
This article Copyright © 1999, The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Abstract
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arathyroid hormone (PTH) and parathyroid hormone–related peptide (PTHrP) bind to and activate the same PTH/PTHrP receptor. Deletion of either the PTHrP gene or the PTH/PTHrP receptor gene leads to acceleration of differentiation of growth plate chondrocytes. To explore further the functional relationships of PTHrP and the PTH/PTHrP receptor, bones of knockout mice were analyzed early in development, and the phenotypes of double-knockout mice were characterized.One early phenotype is shared by both knockouts. Normally, the first chondrocytes to become hypertrophic are located in the centers of long bones; this polarity is greatly diminished in both these knockouts. The PTH/PTHrP receptor–deficient (PTH/PTHrP-R–/–) mice exhibited 2 unique phenotypes not shared by the PTHrP–/– mice. During intramembranous bone formation in the shafts of long bones, only the PTH/PTHrP-R–/– bones exhibit a striking increase in osteoblast number and matrix accumulation. Furthermore, the PTH/PTHrP-R–/– mice showed a dramatic decrease in trabecular bone formation in the primary spongiosa and a delay in vascular invasion of the early cartilage model. In the double-homozygous knockout mice, the delay in vascular invasion did not occur. Thus, PTHrP must slow vascular invasion by a mechanism independent of the PTH/PTHrP receptor.J. Clin. Invest. 104:399–407 (1999).
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