Assessing new bone formation in neonatal calvarial organ cultures

KS Mohammad, JM Chirgwin, TA Guise - Osteoporosis: Methods and …, 2008 - Springer
KS Mohammad, JM Chirgwin, TA Guise
Osteoporosis: Methods and Protocols, 2008Springer
Bone formation is a complex process, and testing anabolic effects on the skeleton of agents
is slow and expensive in animals. Neonatal mouse calvariae cultured ex vivo show strong
anabolic or catabolic bone responses to 1-week treatments and can be analyzed by
quantitative histomorphometry. Changes in new bone area and osteoblast number caused
by added proteins, drugs, or transfected genes can be quantified and analyzed for statistical
significance. The organ cultures preserve much of the skeletal architecture and cellular …
Abstract
Bone formation is a complex process, and testing anabolic effects on the skeleton of agents is slow and expensive in animals. Neonatal mouse calvariae cultured ex vivo show strong anabolic or catabolic bone responses to 1-week treatments and can be analyzed by quantitative histomorphometry. Changes in new bone area and osteoblast number caused by added proteins, drugs, or transfected genes can be quantified and analyzed for statistical significance. The organ cultures preserve much of the skeletal architecture and cellular diversity present in vivo and offer greater physiological relevance than cell lines studied in vitro.
Springer