Intro to Bone Flashcards

1
Q

what do osteoblasts differentiate from?

A

mesenchymal stem cells

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2
Q

what signals to RUNX2?

A

TGF, BMP, PTH, steroids, IGF, FGF, TNF

also WNT/B-Catenin

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3
Q

order of osteoblast differentiation

A

MSC –> pre-osteoblast –> osteoblast –> mature osteoblast

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4
Q

factors present @ pre-osteoblast

A

COL (low), AP (low), RUNX2

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5
Q

factors present @ osteoblast

A

COL (high), AP (high), OSX, OC, ON, RUNX2

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6
Q

factors present @ mature osteoblast

A

COL (high), AP (high), DMP, SOST, DKK1

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7
Q

how do osteocyte processes communicate?

A

gap junctions

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8
Q

factors inducing osteoclast development

A

MCSF, RANK-Ligand

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9
Q

different bone components? 2

A

cortical bone, trabecular bone. constituted from same cells & matrix elements

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10
Q

cortical bone structure/fxn

A

80-90% vol is calcifies. mechanical/protective fxn. little metabolism. always on outside of bones, surrounds trabecular bone. 80% of bone.

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11
Q

trabecular bone structure/fxn

A

15-25% of volume is calcified. mainly fulfills metabolic function. ~20% of bone.

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12
Q

compact bone histology

A

osteon (haversian system), concentric layers of lamellae around. empty spaces = lacunae

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13
Q

trabecular bone histology

A

yellow bone marrow (adipose), bone trabeculae are pink splotches

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14
Q

how do osteocytes signal to bone surface?

A

RANK-L signals to osteoclasts. Sclerostin inhibits growth of osteoblasts. sense mechanical force, direct where bone is deposited or absorbed.

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15
Q

endochondral ossification (zones from top to bottom/bone)

A

zone of reserve cartilage (farthest from bone); zone of proliferation; zone of hypertrophy and calcification; zone of retrogression & ossification; zone of resorption; bone matrix

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16
Q

remodeling cycle of trabecular or cancellous bone

A

12 BRUs/min, annual turnover 25%. accounts for 80% of turnover b/c higher surface:vol ratio. remodeling cycle = 4-6 mo.

17
Q

remodeling cycle of cortical or compact bone

A

3 BRUs/min, 2-3% annual turnover. 20% of turnover, lower rate. less vascularity. 4-6 mo for remodeling cycle.

18
Q

cortical remodeling (haversian) shape

A

cutting cone. matrix –> mineralized osteocytes. break down and resorb. (penis shaped, leading edge = head)

19
Q

cancellous remodeling shape

A

no moving cylindrical structure. dip in thickness then gradually back up

20
Q

what can you use to measure mineralization rate?

A

double tetracycline labeling. 2 days apart, bands show where it was deposited. measure distance between, divide by # days.

21
Q

steps in fracture healing

A
  1. hematoma formation
  2. fibrocartilaginous callus formation (external callus, invaded by new blood vessels into spongy bone trabeculae)
  3. bony callus formation (bony callus of spongy bone, bulge @ fracture)
  4. bone remodeling
22
Q

assembly of pro-alpha collagen and processing into tropocollagen

A

Type 1 collagen. pro-a chains to procollagen to tropocollagen. 3 strands, left-handed triple helix. starts @ C-terminus.

23
Q

assembly of tropocollagen into fibers

A

regular repetitive array. crosslinks and fibrils. spaces = stripes on EM, regular banding pattern

24
Q

collagen cross-links

A

less cross-linking = weaker. more = stronger.

25
Q

which lysines give collagen a higher bond energy?

A

pyridinoline & deoxypyridinoline. mature collagen has higher tensile strength

26
Q

hierarchal structure in human compact bone

A

collagen molecule –> collagen fibril –> collagen fibers –> aversion layer –> bone

27
Q

cement lines purpose?

A

dissipate force. lamellar structure makes bones stronger.

28
Q

osteogenesis imperfecta

A

defective synthesis of organic components of bone matrix. pathophys has to do with osteoblasts. point-mutation, modification of proline residues in T1 cell. defect in synthesis of ECM by osteoblast.

29
Q

OI histo

A

COL1A1. bent fibrils. skeletal fragments. radigraphs: fractures, bowing

30
Q

osteomalacia

A

passive. not enough mineralization. villaneuva strain. too much osteoid, thickened seams. can fix by fixing mineral balance.

31
Q

rickett’s

A

not enough vitamin D. stress fractures at femoral neck common. bowed legs.

32
Q

sclerosteosis

A

defective osteocytes. sclerostin mutation. increased bone mass, can cause nerve entrapment, overgrown bones. nerve entrapment leads to facial palsy, deafness. some mutations also cause syndactyly.

33
Q

osteopetrosis

A

osteoclasts are unable to resorb bone during remodeling cycle. disorder of impaired resorption. high bone density but weak b/c disorganized. can lead to no space in marrow for hematopoesis.

34
Q

osteopetrosis histology

A

paucity of marrow space, full of bone tissue. woven bone, not regular lamellar appearance.

35
Q

Paget’s disease

A

excessive remodeling in one place. bone is weak, disorganized, poorly mineralized. uncoupled remodeling. woven bone (lacks lamellar structure)

36
Q

Paget’s disease clinical features + labs

A

pain, osseous bowing/enlargement. neurologic stx. predisposed to osteosarcoma.
labs: serum AP increased (blastic phase); urinary hydroxyproline increased (lytic phase); most cases are mixed lytic & blastic.