Bone diseases and bone markers Flashcards
What are the 4 purposes of bone?
1) Structural support for the body
2) Protection of vital organs
3) Blood marrow production (via marrow)
4) Storage bank for minerals (especially calcium)
What are the 2 types of bone, making up bone?
1) Cortical bone - hard outer layer
2) Trabecular bone - spongy, inner layer
What 3 types of cells are found within bone?
Osteoblasts, osteoclasts and osteocytes
What makes up the extracellular space of bone?
Organic matrix made up mainly of collagen
Inorganic components including hydroxyapatite and minerals (calcium and phosphate)
What is the main role of trabecular bone?
Bone marrow is held within trabecular bone, it is highly porous with a large surface area - for high rate of metabolic activity
The extracellular matrix of bone is made up of mainly what substance and why?
Collagen - provides tensile strength
What surrounds cortical bone?
Periosteum
What s the process of bone formation? 3
1) Osteoblasts secrete matrix - protein and minerals, mainly collagen
2) Before mineralization this is called osteoid
3) Matrix is then mineralized by hydroxyapatite (calcium-phosphate-hydroxide salt) which hardens the osteoid
What are osteoblasts formed from?
Terminally differentiated products of mesenchymal stem cells
What is osteoid?
Non mineralized organic matric consisting mainly of type 1 collagen
What are osteocytes?
Osteoblasts which are buried/ trapped within the bone matrix after it undergoes mineralization
What are the 3 roles of osteoblasts?
1) Make osteoid
2) Make hormones (eg. osteocalcin), matrix proteins and alkaline phosphatase
3) Communicate with other bone cells
What is the morphology of osteoclasts?
Large, multinucleated cell with a ruffled-resorption border
Which 2 substances help with osteoclastic maturation?
RANK ligand and osteoprotegrin
Which 3 hormones are osteoclasts regulated by?
1) PTH
2) Calcitonin
3) IL-6
Where are osteoclasts found within bone?
In bone pits - resorption border
What is the role of osteoclasts?
Break down bone - critical for repair and maintenance of bone
How do osteoclasts break down bone?
By production of enzymes such as tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), and Cathepsin K - secreted to breakdown extracellular matrix
How do osteocytes communicate with eachother?
Via cytoplasmic extensions
What is the role of osteocytes?
Involved with regulating bone matrix turnover
What shape are osteocytes?
Star shaped
What is the rough process of bone remodeling?
1) Osteoclasts recruited to bone - lie in absorption pits and breakdown bone
2) Osteoclasts also signal to osteoblasts which then arrive and make osteoid
3) Mineralisation of the osteoid occurs and osteoblasts get trapped in the bone thus becoming osteocytes
The adult skeleton is replaced once every how many years?
10 years
What is key about the activity of osteoblasts and osteoclasts?
Normal bone is a constant state of turnover caused by resorption by osteoclasts and formation by osteoblasts
Thus as activity of osteoclasts increases so does activity of osteoblasts