scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Tartrate-resistant acid phosphate activity as osteoclastic marker: Sensitivity of cytochemical assessment and serum assay in comparison with standardized osteoclast histomorphometry

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Serum TRAP activity is confirmed as a valid cytochemical marker for identification of osteoclasts, but is an osteoclastic marker of weak sensitivity due to known factors, such as synthesis of the enzyme not being unique to osteoclast, enzyme instability, and the presence of inhibitors in serum.
Abstract
Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) activity is regarded as an important cytochemical marker of osteoclasts; its concentration in serum is utilized as a biochemical marker of osteoclast function and degree of bone resorption. This study was carried out to assess the sensitivity of TRAP activity both as a cytochemical marker in histological sections and as a biochemical marker in serum in comparison with the standardized histomorphometric variables of osteoclasts. To this end we investigated 24 patients (21 women, 3 men; 60 +/- 17 years of age) affected with various metabolic bone diseases. Osteoclast surface (OcS/BS) and osteoclast number (OcN/BS) were evaluated by standardized histomorphometry in iliac crest biopsies. On the basis of TRAP cytochemical activity, TRAP-positive osteoclast surface (TRAP + OcS/BS) and number (TRAP + OcN/BS) were measured. TRAP-positive cells adjacent to bone and showing one nucleus or no nuclei at all in the plane of section were included in the counts as osteoclasts. Serum TRAP activity was determined by spectrophotometric assay. Values of OcS/BS and OcN/BS were much lower than those of TRAP + OcS/BS (-50%) and TRAP + OcN/BS (-60%), respectively. Correlations between OcS/BS and TRAP + OcS/BS, and between OcN/BS and TRAP + OcN/BS, were highly significant. Serum TRAP was significantly correlated with OcS/BS, OcN/BS, and TRAP + OcN/BS. These correlations, however, were rather low. Moreover, serum TRAP did not correlate with TRAP + OcS/BS. From these results, the conclusion can be drawn that while TRAP activity is confirmed as a valid cytochemical marker for identification of osteoclasts, serum TRAP activity is an osteoclastic marker of weak sensitivity. This may be due to known factors, such as synthesis of the enzyme not being unique to osteoclasts, enzyme instability, and the presence of inhibitors in serum. Mononucleated osteoclasts do not significantly influence the serum enzyme levels.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparative view on mechanisms and functions of skeletal remodelling in teleost fish, with special emphasis on osteoclasts and their function

TL;DR: The current knowledge about resorption and remodelling of the skeleton in teleost fish, the largest and most diverse group of extant vertebrates, is reviewed for the first time.
Journal ArticleDOI

BMP-2 liberated from biomimetic implant coatings induces and sustains direct ossification in an ectopic rat model.

TL;DR: BMP-2 incorporated into biomimetic calcium phosphate coatings is capable not only of inducing bone formation at an ectopic site in vivo but also of doing so with a very high potency at a low pharmacological level, and of sustaining this activity for a considerable period of time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Osteocyte function, osteocyte death and bone fracture resistance.

TL;DR: There is now an emerging consensus that osteocytes modulate signals arising from mechanical loading and so direct the appearance and disappearance of bone tissue at the microscopic level, which allows bone as an organ both to grow and to adapt efficiently to the body's mechanical needs for strength with lightness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Features of mono- and multinucleated bone resorbing cells of the zebrafish Danio rerio and their contribution to skeletal development, remodeling, and growth.

TL;DR: Bone resorption is primarily subjected to the demands of growth, the appearance of mono‐ and multinucleated osteoclasts is site‐ and age‐related, and bone remodeling occurs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biomimetic coatings for bone tissue engineering of critical-sized defects

TL;DR: Bone morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP-2)-incorporated biomimetic coating can be a solution for a large bone defect repair in the fields of dental implantology, maxillofacial surgery and orthopaedics both in vitro and in vivo.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Bone acid phosphatase: Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase as a marker of osteoclast function

TL;DR: Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatases of bone may be suitable biochemical probes for osteoclast function, but it will be necessary to achieve further purification in order to develop analytical methods with sufficient sensitivity and specificity to ensure precise localization and quantitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biochemical markers of bone turnover.

TL;DR: For assessment of the level of bone turnover in women with vertebral osteoporosis, serum osteocalcin and urinary pyridinoline appear to be the most sensitive markers so far.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cellular biology and biochemical mechanism of bone resorption. A review of recent developments on the formation, activation, and mode of action of osteoclasts.

TL;DR: The newest knowledge on the osteoclast allows us to consider bone resorption in a global perspective, as the resultant of three successive steps that may each be individually regulated by physiopathologic or pharmacologic agents.
Journal Article

Kinetic and cytochemical identification of osteoclast precursors and their differentiation into multinucleated osteoclasts.

TL;DR: Mononuclear precursors of the osteoclast are members of the mononuclear-phagocyte lineage and differentiate early to synthesize, store, and later secrete large quantities of lysosomal enzymes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical usefulness of serum tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity determination to evaluate bone turnover.

TL;DR: A significant inverse correlation between serum TRAP activity values and bone mineral density (BMD) measured both at an ultradistal radial point and at the lumbar spine is found.
Related Papers (5)