- of
blood calcium.
Osteoclasts are
found on
those surfaces of bone that are
undergoing resorption. On such surfaces, the
osteoclasts are seen to be located...
-
released into the
extracellular fluid as the
osteoclasts tunnel into the
mineralized bone.
Osteoclasts are
prominent in the
tissue destruction found...
- Bone is
constantly remodeled by the
resorption of
osteoclasts and
created by osteoblasts.
Osteoclasts are
large cells with
multiple nuclei located on bone...
- and
osteoclasts (which
break down bone);
osteocytes are also
present in bone.[citation needed]
Precursors to
osteoclasts,
called pre-
osteoclasts, express...
- bone matrix) by
osteoclasts. In osteopetrosis, the
number of
osteoclasts may be reduced, normal, or increased. Most importantly,
osteoclast dysfunction mediates...
-
about the
physiological function of
osteoclasts,
theories on
their origins were
heavily debated. Many
believed osteoclasts and
osteoblasts came from the same...
-
adult bone
remodelling by
mediating interactions between bone-resorbing
osteoclasts and bone-forming osteoblasts. Type R
blood vessels are characterised...
- and
become osteoclasts.
Osteoprotegerin (OPG) is also
secreted by
osteoclasts and
stromal cells; this
inhibits RANKL and
therefore osteoclast activity....
-
molecule (also
known as CD254),
found on osteoblasts,
serves to
activate osteoclasts,
which are
critically involved in bone resorption.
Osteoclastic activity...
- NF-κB
ligand (RANKL)–induced
osteoclast differentiation.
Pepstatin A
suppresses the
formation of
multinuclear osteoclasts dose-dependently. This inhibition...