Formation of Bone
Bones are formed by two
mechanisms: intramembranous ossification (bones
of the skull, part of the mandible and clavicle) or endochondral
ossification.
Intramembranous
Ossification
Intramembranous ossification
occurs within a membranous, condensed plate of mesenchymal cells. At the
initial site of ossification (ossification centre)
mesenchymal cells (osteoprogenitor cells) differentiate into osteoblasts. The
osteoblasts begin to deposit the organic bone matrix, the osteoid. The matrix
separates osteoblasts, which, from now on, are located in lacunae within the matrix.
The collagen fibres of the osteoid form a woven network without a preferred
orientation, and lamellae are not present at this stage.
Because of the lack of a preferred orientation of the collagen fibres in the
matrix, this type of bone is also called woven bone.
The osteoid calcifies leading to the formation of primitive trabecular bone.
Further deposition and
calcification of osteoid at sites where compact bone is needed leads to the
formation of primitive compact bone.
Note the distinction between macroscopic and microscopic
appearance when the bone is named. We again have the two macroscopically
different forms of bone - trabecular bone and compact bone - but their early
developmental ("primitive") forms consist of woven bone.
Through subsequent reorganisation
the primitive compact and trabecular bone is converted into mature compact and
trabecular bone. During reorganisation and growth, woven
bone will, in time, be replaced by lamellar bone.
Intramembranous
ossification does not require the existence of a cartilage bone model.
Suitable Slides
sections of the developing mandible (or some
other bones of the skull) or clavicle - H&E,
van Gieson
Sections prepared to show endochondral ossification (see below) may be an
alternative if no specifically prepared slides of intramembranous ossification
are available. The periosteal collar, i.e. the manchette of bone forming around
the diaphysis of the cartilage model of the bone, is formed by a mechanism
similar to intramembranous ossification and results in the deposition of woven
bone.
Mandible, intramembranous
ossification - H&E
The developing bone will in sections usually be
associated with a number of other tissues which develop in close association
with it. In case of the mandible, there can be developing teeth, the tongue,
skin and salivary glands.
The first job - best done at low magnification - is to find the developing
bone. It should look like a coarse meshwork (trabecular
bone) of pink tissue surrounding patches of much lighter or unstained tissue.
Lamellae are not visible (woven bone) and the
lacunae are larger than lacunae in mature bone. Ossification centres appear as
areas of a gradual transition from connective tissue to bone. Light, pinkish
bone matrix is found between the osteoblasts.
Depending on the state of development of the bone, it
is occasionally possible to find bone trabeculae which are lined by a layer of
osteoblasts. These osteblasts are depositing the first lamellae on the already
existing trabeculae. The trabeculae will therefore have a core of woven bone,
which is surrounded by lamellar bone. Compare the shapes, sizes and frequencies
of lacunae in lamellar and woven bone if both types of bone are present.
Title:
Formation of Bone
by:
om
at
2013-02-15T03:03:00+07:00
Rating: 4.8
of 5 Reviews
Formation of Bone