Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Language

English

Publication Date

7-17-2022

Journal

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

DOI

10.3390/ijms23147873

PMID

35887221

PMCID

PMC9315528

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

7-17-2022

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

The cranial base contains a special type of growth plate termed the synchondrosis, which functions as the growth center of the skull. The synchondrosis is composed of bidirectional opposite-facing layers of resting, proliferating, and hypertrophic chondrocytes, and lacks the secondary ossification center. In long bones, the resting zone of the epiphyseal growth plate houses a population of parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP)-expressing chondrocytes that contribute to the formation of columnar chondrocytes. Whether PTHrP+ chondrocytes in the synchondrosis possess similar functions remains undefined. Using Pthrp-mCherry knock-in mice, we found that PTHrP+ chondrocytes predominantly occupied the lateral wedge-shaped area of the synchondrosis, unlike those in the femoral growth plate that reside in the resting zone within the epiphysis. In vivo cell-lineage analyses using a tamoxifen-inducible Pthrp-creER line revealed that PTHrP+ chondrocytes failed to establish columnar chondrocytes in the synchondrosis. Therefore, PTHrP+ chondrocytes in the synchondrosis do not possess column-forming capabilities, unlike those in the resting zone of the long bone growth plate. These findings support the importance of the secondary ossification center within the long bone epiphysis in establishing the stem cell niche for PTHrP+ chondrocytes, the absence of which may explain the lack of column-forming capabilities of PTHrP+ chondrocytes in the cranial base synchondrosis.

Keywords

Animals, Cell Differentiation, Chondrocytes, Epiphyses, Growth Plate, Mice, Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein, Skull Base, bone biology, cartilage, chondrocyte(s), craniofacial biology/genetics, developmental biology, growth/development, cranial base, PTHrP

Published Open-Access

yes

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