9 Cytokine and Growth Factor Regulation of Osteoclastogenesis
Abstract
THE ESSENTIAL ROLE OF THE RANKL-RANK SYSTEM IN OSTEOCLASTOGENESIS
Osteoclast differentiation is a tightly regulated process because the balance between osteoclasts and osteoblasts is critical for bone homeostasis. Osteoclasts differentiate from hematopoietic cells of monocyte/macrophage lineage, but osteoclastogenesis-supporting cells of mesenchymal origin are required for the differentiation commitment. Thus, osteoclasts have traditionally been formed in a coculture of hematopoietic cells derived from bone marrow and calvarial osteoblasts, which were thought to express an unknown osteoclast differentiation factor. Before this factor was identified, information about the molecules involved in osteoclast differentiation had been obtained from the analysis of osteopetrotic mice (Fig. 1) (Asagiri and Takayanagi 2006).
RANKL, a type II membrane protein of the TNF superfamily, was identified as the long sought-after osteoclast differentiation factor expressed by osteoblasts, but interestingly, the same molecule...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.263-275