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  • Earliest phases of chondrogenesis are dependent upon angiogenesis during ectopic bone formation in mice.

Earliest phases of chondrogenesis are dependent upon angiogenesis during ectopic bone formation in mice.

Bone (2017-04-17)
Beth Bragdon, Stephanie Lam, Sherif Aly, Alexandra Femia, Abigail Clark, Amira Hussein, Elise F Morgan, Louis C Gerstenfeld
ABSTRACT

Endochondral ossification is the process where cartilage forms prior to ossification and in which new bone forms during both fracture healing and ectopic bone formation. Transitioning to ossification is a highly coordinated process between hypertrophic chondrocytes, vascular endothelial cells, osteoblasts and osteoclasts. A critical biological process that is central to the interactions of these various cell types is angiogenesis. Although it is well established that angiogenesis is crucial for fracture repair, less is known pertaining to the role of angiogenesis in ectopic bone formation. Furthermore, fracture repair models are complicated by extensive trauma, subsequent inflammatory responses and concurrent repair processes in multiple tissues. In order to more definitively characterize the relationship between angiogenesis and postnatal endochondral ossification, a model of ectopic bone formation was used. Human demineralized bone matrix (DBM) was implanted in immune-deficient mice (rag null (B6.129S7-Rag1