Behaviour of Osteoclasts in Vitro: Contact Behaviour of Osteoclasts with Osteoblast-like Cells and Networking of Osteoclasts for 3D Orientation
Overview
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The cell-cell contact-induced behaviour of osteoclasts and osteoblasts in vitro was investigated by time-lapse videomicroscopy. Contact interactions of osteoclasts with autologous cells, derived mostly from chick but also from rat bones, included contact inhibition, failure of contact inhibition, contact guidance along stabilised edges of other cells, and underlapping of other cells. Message-mediated contact behaviour (MMCB) between osteoclasts and autologous osteoblastic cells resulted, after a time delay, in zeiosis of the osteoblast-like cell which could continue, or even begin, after the osteoclast broke contact, leading to retraction of the cell and occupation of its position by the osteoclast. MMCB may play a part in the breaching of the osteoblastic sheet by osteoclasts and, in general, in the malignant spread of neoplastic cells. Two or more osteoclasts were often joined by connecting and coordinating tubules (CCTs) of varied, and varying, lengths and widths. Osteoclasts could travel along the CCTs in both directions, or send nuclei through them. The CCTs became temporarily attached to the surface of other cells, or to the substrate, then acting as a temporary anchorage for orientation and for the return of the cell to the same spot. The dynamics of osteoclastic behaviour suggest that such a networking of osteoclasts is valuable for the 3D coordination of their role in bone turnover.
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