Journal article

Endochondral ossification: How cartilage is converted into bone in the developing skeleton

EJ Mackie, YA Ahmed, L Tatarczuch, KS Chen, M Mirams

International Journal of Biochemistry and Cell Biology | Published : 2008

Abstract

Endochondral ossification is the process by which the embryonic cartilaginous model of most bones contributes to longitudinal growth and is gradually replaced by bone. During endochondral ossification, chondrocytes proliferate, undergo hypertrophy and die; the cartilage extracellular matrix they construct is then invaded by blood vessels, osteoclasts, bone marrow cells and osteoblasts, the last of which deposit bone on remnants of cartilage matrix. The sequential changes in chondrocyte behaviour are tightly regulated by both systemic factors and locally secreted factors, which act on receptors to effect intracellular signalling and activation of chondrocyte-selective transcription factors. S..

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University of Melbourne Researchers