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      Structure and formation of the twisted plywood pattern of collagen fibrils in rat lamellar bone.

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          Abstract

          This study was designed to elucidate details of the structure and formation process of the alternate lamellar pattern known to exist in lamellar bone. For this purpose, we examined basic internal lamellae in femurs of young rats by transmission and scanning electron microscopy, the latter employing two different macerations with NaOH at concentrations of 10 and 24%. Observations after the maceration with 10% NaOH showed that the regular and periodic rotation of collagen fibrils caused an alternation between two types of lamellae: one consisting of transversely and nearly transversely cut fibrils, and the other consisting of longitudinally and nearly longitudinally cut fibrils. This finding confirms the consistency of the twisted plywood model. The maceration method with 24% NaOH removed bone components other than cells, thus allowing for three-dimensional observations of osteoblast morphology. Osteoblasts extended finger-like processes paralleling the inner bone surface, and grouped in such a way that, within a group, the processes arranged in a similar direction. Transmission electron microscopy showed that newly deposited fibrils were arranged alongside these processes. For the formation of the alternating pattern, our findings suggest that: (1) osteoblasts control the collagen fibril arrangement through their finger-like process position; (2) osteoblasts behave similarly within a group; (3) osteoblasts move their processes synchronously and periodically to promote alternating different fibril orientation; and (4) this dynamic sequential deposition of fibrils results in the alternate lamellar (or twisted plywood) pattern.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Electron Microsc (Tokyo)
          Journal of electron microscopy
          Oxford University Press (OUP)
          1477-9986
          0022-0744
          Apr 2012
          : 61
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Developmental Biology of Hard Tissue, Hokkaido University, Kita 13, Nishi 7, Kita-Ku, Sapporo 060-8586, Japan. yamatsu@den.hokudai.ac.jp
          Article
          dfs033
          10.1093/jmicro/dfs033
          22362877
          61f9ac8e-5fdd-43c1-acde-a0c0658ae15b
          History

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