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Time-course of mast cell accumulation in rat bone marrow after ovariectomy
Authors:Ph. Lesclous  D. Guez  A. Llorens  J. L. Saffar
Affiliation:(1) Laboratoire de Biologie et Physiopathologie Cranio-Faciales, Groupe Physiopathologie Osseuse, Faculté de Chirurgie Dentaire, Université René Descartes (Paris-V), 1, rue Maurice Arnoux, 92120 Montrouge, France
Abstract:We previously reported that mast cells accumulate in the tibia bone marrow of ovariectomized (OVX) rats. In this study, the timing of mast cell accumulation and osteoclast generation were compared to determine whether or not mast cell accumulation preceded osteoclast recruitment after ovariectomy. This may be significant because of the number of cytokines released by mast cells that are potentially active on resorption. Sprague-Dawley rats (120) aged 12 weeks were OVX or sham-operated, and killed on days 4, 7, 14, 28, and 56 postsurgery. Ten additional intact rats were used as baseline controls. Ovariectomy was confirmed by a sharp and sustained fall in serum estradiol. The loss in trabecular bone volume (BV/TV) began on day 7, reaching 80% on day 56 (P<0.001 vs baseline controls). The number of osteoclasts (N.OC/TBPm) increased in the OVX rats between days 4 and 7 (+130%;P<0.001), and continued rising to day 28. During the next month, it decreased greatly (−63%,P<0.001 on day 56 vs day 28). In the sham-treated rats, few mast cells were scattered in the bone marrow (1.9 cells/mm2 in the baseline controls). Their number fluctuated during the experimental period, but at each time-point it was lower than in the OVX rats. They were predominantly (90%) of the mucosal subtype. In the OVX rats, their number doubled between days 4 and 14 (P<0.001), reached 8.6 cells/mm2 on day 28 (a 5.4-fold increase compared with day 4 OVX rats), and plateaued for the next 4 weeks. OVX had no effects on mast cell subtypes. In conclusion, mast cell accumulation and osteoclast differentiation are precocious and concomitant; this does not support a direct role for mast cells in osteoclast recruitment. Rather, the two cell populations may derive from a common precursor or be targeted simultaneously by estrogen depletion through common stimulator(s). Mast cell hyperplasia appears to be a significant, and usually unknown, manifestation of ovariectomy in the bone marrow environment.
Keywords:Ovariectomy  Osteoporosis  Mast cell  Osteoclast  Estrogen deficiency  Bone histomorphometry
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