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Nano-topography sensing by osteoclasts.

Dafna Geblinger, +2 more
- 01 May 2010 - 
- Vol. 123, Iss: 10, pp 1503-1510
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TLDR
It was observed that steps or sub-micrometer cracks on the smooth surface stimulate local ring formation, raising the possibility that similar imperfections on bone surfaces may stimulate local osteoclast resorptive activity.
Abstract
Bone resorption by osteoclasts depends on the assembly of a specialized, actin-rich adhesive ‘sealing zone’ that delimits the area designed for degradation. In this study, we show that the level of roughness of the underlying adhesive surface has a profound effect on the formation and stability of the sealing zone and the associated F-actin. As our primary model substrate, we use ‘smooth’ and ‘rough’ calcite crystals with average topography values of 12 nm and 530 nm, respectively. We show that the smooth surfaces induce the formation of small and unstable actin rings with a typical lifespan of ~8 minutes, whereas the sealing zones formed on the rough calcite surfaces are considerably larger, and remain stable for more than 6 hours. It was further observed that steps or sub-micrometer cracks on the smooth surface stimulate local ring formation, raising the possibility that similar imperfections on bone surfaces may stimulate local osteoclast resorptive activity. The mechanisms whereby the physical properties of the substrate influence osteoclast behavior and their involvement in osteoclast function are discussed.

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Citations
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Podosome rings generate forces that drive saltatory osteoclast migration.

TL;DR: It is observed that podosome rings generate tension forces and that osteoclasts migrate by periodically moving toward the actin-containing structures, and actin dynamics thus not only correlate with the cell migration, but drive it.
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Comparison of osteoclastogenesis and resorption activity of human osteoclasts on tissue culture polystyrene and on natural extracellular bone matrix in 2D and 3D

TL;DR: It is concluded that using TCPS as culture substrate does not affect the expression of osteoclast-specific markers and the analysis of resorption activity can successfully be conducted on cortical as well as on cancellous bone matrices.
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Positively Charged Material Surfaces Generated by Plasma Polymerized Allylamine Enhance Vinculin Mobility in Vital Human Osteoblastss

TL;DR: The results emphasize the role of the surface charge for the design of artificial scaffolds in bone repair and suggest that positive charges control the cell physiology which seems to be dominant over the integrin receptor binding to collagen I.
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Taking Cell-Matrix Adhesions to the Third Dimension

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