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Isolated osteoclasts resorb the organic and inorganic components of bone.

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TLDR
Osteoclasts have the capacity to resorb the organic phase of bone by a process localized to the osteoclast and its attachment site and appears to be independent of secretion of neutral collagenase and probably reflects acid protease activity.
Abstract
Osteoclasts are the principal resorptive cells of bone, yet their capacity to degrade collagen, the major organic component of bone matrix, remains unexplored. Accordingly, we have studied the bone resorptive activity of highly enriched populations of isolated chicken osteoclasts, using as substrate devitalized rat bone which had been labeled in vivo with L-[5-3H]proline or 45Ca, and bone-like matrix produced and mineralized in vitro by osteoblast-like rat osteosarcoma cells. When co-cultured with a radiolabeled substrate, osteoclast-mediated mineral mobilization reached a maximal rate within 2 h, whereas organic matrix degradation appeared more slowly, reaching maximal rate by 12-24 h. Thereafter, the rates of organic and inorganic matrix resorption were essentially linear and parallel for at least 6 d when excess substrate was available. Osteoclast-mediated degradation of bone collagen was confirmed by amino acid analysis. 39% of the solubilized tritium was recovered as trans-4-hydroxyproline, 47% as proline. 10,000 osteoclasts solubilized 70% of the total radioactivity and 65% of the [3H]-trans-4-hydroxyproline from 100 micrograms of 25-50 micron bone fragments within 5 d. Virtually all released tritium-labeled protein was of low molecular weight, 99% with Mr less than or equal to 10,000, and 65% with Mr less than or equal to 1,000. Moreover, when the 14% of resorbed [3H]proline-labeled peptides with Mr greater than or equal to 2,000 were examined for the presence of TCA and TCB, the characteristic initial products of mammalian collagenase activity, none was detected by SDS PAGE. In addition, osteoclast-conditioned medium had no collagenolytic activity, and exogenous TCA and TCB fragments were not degraded by osteoclasts. On the other hand, osteoclast lysates have collagenolytic enzyme activity in acidic but not in neutral buffer, with maximum activity at pH 4.0. These data indicate that osteoclasts have the capacity to resorb the organic phase of bone by a process localized to the osteoclast and its attachment site. This process appears to be independent of secretion of neutral collagenase and probably reflects acid protease activity.

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Citations
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Bone Resorption by Osteoclasts

TL;DR: Osteopetrotic mutants have provided a wealth of information about the genes that regulate the differentiation of osteoclasts and their capacity to resorb bone.
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Matrix Metalloproteinases: A Review

TL;DR: The present review discusses in detail the primary structures and the overlapping yet distinct substrate specificities of MMPs as well as the mode of activation of the unique MMP precursors.
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Modulation of Osteoclast Differentiation

TL;DR: Osteotropic hormones such as 1α, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1α,25(OH)2D3], PTH, and calcitonin preferentially modulate the process of bone resorption to maintain bone remodeling.
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Bisphosphonate action. Alendronate localization in rat bone and effects on osteoclast ultrastructure.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that alendronate binds to resorption surfaces, is locally released during acidification, the rise in concentration stops resOrption and membrane ruffling, without destroying the osteoclasts.
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Osteoclastic bone resorption by a polarized vacuolar proton pump

TL;DR: The mechanism by which osteoclasts transport protons into that resorptive microenvironment was identified by means of adenosine triphosphate-dependent weak base accumulation in isolated osteoclast membrane vesicles, which exhibited substrate and inhibition properties characteristic of the vacuolar, electrogenic H+-transporting H-ATPase.
References
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TL;DR: Susceptibility to Vertebrate Collagenases, Susceptability to Other Proteases, and Solubility and Purification are studied.
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Cathepsin B1. A lysosomal enzyme that degrades native collagen

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Human skin collagenase: isolation of precursor and active forms from both fibroblast and organ cultures.

TL;DR: Human skin procollagenase has been isolated, in pure form, from the medium of fibroblasts cultured in the presence or absence of added serum, suggesting that a serum-inhibitable proteolytic system is present in these cultures which, like trypsin, converts procollsagenase to the active enzyme forms that can be isolated from serum-free organ culture medium.
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The effects of parathyroid hormone, colchicine, and calcitonin on the ultrastructure and the activity of osteoclasts in organ culture.

TL;DR: The ultrastructure of osteoclasts was examined in fetal rat bones after stimulation or inhibition of resorption in culture, suggesting that the cells had returned to their inactive state.
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