Litcius/Paper detail

How faithfully does intramembranous bone regeneration recapitulate embryonic skeletal development?

Frank C. Ko, Dale R. Sumner

2020Developmental Dynamics49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Postnatal intramembranous bone regeneration plays an important role during a wide variety of musculoskeletal regeneration processes such as fracture healing, joint replacement and dental implant surgery, distraction osteogenesis, stress fracture healing, and repair of skeletal defects caused by trauma or resection of tumors. The molecular basis of intramembranous bone regeneration has been interrogated using rodent models of most of these conditions. These studies reveal that signaling pathways such as Wnt, TGFβ/BMP, FGF, VEGF, and Notch are invoked, reminiscent of embryonic development of membranous bone. Discoveries of several skeletal stem cell/progenitor populations using mouse genetic models also reveal the potential sources of postnatal intramembranous bone regeneration. The purpose of this review is to compare the underlying molecular signals and progenitor cells that characterize embryonic development of membranous bone and postnatal intramembranous bone regeneration.

Topics & Concepts

Intramembranous ossificationBiologyRegeneration (biology)Bone healingProgenitor cellCell biologyEmbryonic stem cellDistraction osteogenesisWnt signaling pathwayStem cellEndochondral ossificationAnatomyNeuroscienceGeneticsSignal transductionCartilageDistractionGeneBone fractures and treatmentsConnective tissue disorders researchNeonatal Respiratory Health Research
How faithfully does intramembranous bone regeneration recapitulate embryonic skeletal development? | Litcius