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Genetic regulation of bone mass: from bone density to bone strength
Authors:Craig B Langman
Institution:(1) Division of Kidney Diseases, Childrenrsquos Memorial Hospital, 2300 Childrenrsquos Plaza, MS 37, Chicago, IL 60614, USA
Abstract:Osteoporosis is a common disease characterized in adults by diminished bone density. Bone is an organ that evolves and grows throughout life, and establishing optimal bone density in childhood and adolescence serves to buffer bone loss later in life. Bone density, a measurable entity, is the clinical substitute for bone strength, or the ability to defend against fracture. Chronic diseases may adversely affect optimal peak bone density. Bone density is under genetic control, as revealed by three lines of investigations. These include (1) the finding of quantitative trait loci for bone density, (2) the finding that specific mutations in genes that are important in the development of osteoblast or osteoclast lineages alter bone density, and (3) the linkeage of known polymorphisms for genes involved in mineral homeostasis to bone density and/or fracture. Future therapeutics for improving peak bone density or delaying bone loss later in life may take advantage of the genetic nature of bone density development.This work was presented in part at the IPNA Seventh Symposium on Growth and Development in Children with Chronic Kidney Disease: The Molecular Basis of Skeletal Growth, 1–3 April 2004, Heidelberg, Germany
Keywords:Osteoporosis  Mineral metabolism  Osteoblast  Osteoclast  Quantitative trait loci  Polymorphisms  Vitamin D receptor gene  Estrogen receptor gene
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