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Title: Role of the subchondral vascular system in endochondral ossification: endothelial cells specifically derepress late differentiation in resting chondrocytes in vitro. Author: Bittner K, Vischer P, Bartholmes P, Bruckner P. Journal: Exp Cell Res; 1998 Feb 01; 238(2):491-7. PubMed ID: 9473358. Abstract: Endochondral ossification in growth plates proceeds through several consecutive steps of late cartilage differentiation leading to chondrocyte hypertrophy, vascular invasion, and, eventually, to replacement of the tissue by bone. It is well established that the subchondral vascular system is pivotal in the regulation of this process. Cells of subchondral blood vessels act as a source of vascular invasion and, in addition, release factors influencing growth and differentiation of chondrocytes in the avascular growth plate. To elucidate the paracrine contribution of endothelial cells we studied the hypertrophic development of resting chondrocytes from the caudal third of chick embryo sterna in co-culture with endothelial cells. The design of the experiments prevented cell-to-cell contact but allowed paracrine communication between endothelial cells and chondrocytes. Under these conditions, chondrocytes rapidly became hypertrophied in vitro and expressed the stage-specific markers collagen X and alkaline phosphatase. This development also required signaling by thyroid hormone in synergy. Conditioned media could replace the endothelial cells, indicating that diffusible factors mediated this process. By contrast, smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts, or hypertrophic chondrocytes did not secrete this activity, suggesting that the factors were specific for endothelial cells. We conclude that endochondral ossification is under the control of a mutual communication between chondrocytes and endothelial cells. A finely tuned balance between chondrocyte-derived signals repressing cartilage maturation and endothelial signals promoting late differentiation of chondrocytes is essential for normal endochondral ossification during development, growth, and repair of bone. A dysregulation of this balance in permanent joint cartilage also may be responsible for the initiation of pathological cartilage degeneration in joint diseases.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]