Human bone cellsin vitro

PG Robey, JD Termine - Calcified tissue international, 1985 - Springer
PG Robey, JD Termine
Calcified tissue international, 1985Springer
Human bone cell cultures were established by maintaining collagenase-treated, bone
fragments in low Ca++ medium. The resulting cell cultures exhibited a high level of alkaline
phosphatase activity and produced a significant increase in intracellular cAMP when
exposed to the 1–34 fragment of human parathyroid hormone. With continued culture, the
cells formed a thick, extracellular matrix that mineralized when cultures were provided daily
with normal levels of calcium, fresh ascorbic acid (50 μg/ml) and 10 mM β-glycerol …
Summary
Human bone cell cultures were established by maintaining collagenase-treated, bone fragments in low Ca++ medium. The resulting cell cultures exhibited a high level of alkaline phosphatase activity and produced a significant increase in intracellular cAMP when exposed to the 1–34 fragment of human parathyroid hormone. With continued culture, the cells formed a thick, extracellular matrix that mineralized when cultures were provided daily with normal levels of calcium, fresh ascorbic acid (50 μg/ml) and 10 mM β-glycerol phosphate. Biosynthetically, these cells produced type I collagen (without any type III collagen), and the bone-specific protein, osteonectin. In addition, the cells produced sulfated macromolecules electrophoretically identical to those positively identified as the bone proteoglycan in parallel cultures of fetal bovine bone cells. This technique provides a useful system for the study of osteoblast metabolismin vitro
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