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Journal articles

2013
Linda Moskovszky, Bernadine Idowu, Richard Taylor, Fredrik Mertens, Nicholas Athanasou, Adrienne Flanagan (2013)  Analysis of giant cell tumour of bone cells for Noonan syndrome/Cherubism-related mutations.   J Oral Pathol Med 42: 1. 95-98 Jan  
Abstract: Background:  Giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) is an osteolytic tumour which contains numerous osteoclast-like giant cells and a proliferation of mononuclear stromal cells (MSC). Giant cell-rich osteolytic lesions can also develop in the jaw bones in Noonan syndrome, a cherubism-like developmental abnormality that is transmitted in an autosomal dominant fashion, often because of mutation in the PTPN11 or BRAF genes. Methods:  We screened GCTBs for mutations in PTPN11 and BRAF to determine whether GCTBs develop through alterations of genes involved in Noonan syndrome. MSC were isolated from 10 GCTBs. Results:  Chromosome banding analysis of these cells revealed telomeric associations (tas) in 7 of the 10 cases. Thus, the cultured cells expressed a cytogenetic abnormality typically found in short-term cultures from GCTBs. Sequencing of DNA extracted from the seven GCTB-derived MSC cultures displaying tas did not identify any mutation in PTPN11 or in exons 9-15 of BRAF. Conclusion:  Our findings indicate that the molecular pathways involved in GCTB development are different from those causing Noonan syndrome. The method for isolating and culturing GCTB stromal cells described in this study generated a population of MSC that contained tas, indicating that it is useful for obtaining stromal cells from GCTB and other giant cell-rich lesions, such as giant cell reparative granuloma, for genetic and other studies.
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2012
L van der Heijden, C L M H Gibbons, P D S Dijkstra, J R Kroep, C S P van Rijswijk, R A Nout, K M Bradley, N A Athanasou, P C W Hogendoorn, M A J van de Sande (2012)  The management of diffuse-type giant cell tumour (pigmented villonodular synovitis) and giant cell tumour of tendon sheath (nodular tenosynovitis).   J Bone Joint Surg Br 94: 7. 882-888 Jul  
Abstract: Giant cell tumours (GCT) of the synovium and tendon sheath can be classified into two forms: localised (giant cell tumour of the tendon sheath, or nodular tenosynovitis) and diffuse (diffuse-type giant cell tumour or pigmented villonodular synovitis). The former principally affects the small joints. It presents as a solitary slow-growing tumour with a characteristic appearance on MRI and is treated by surgical excision. There is a significant risk of multiple recurrences with aggressive diffuse disease. A multidisciplinary approach with dedicated MRI, histological assessment and planned surgery with either adjuvant radiotherapy or systemic targeted therapy is required to improve outcomes in recurrent and refractory diffuse-type GCT. Although arthroscopic synovectomy through several portals has been advocated as an alternative to arthrotomy, there is a significant risk of inadequate excision and recurrence, particularly in the posterior compartment of the knee. For local disease partial arthroscopic synovectomy may be sufficient, at the risk of recurrence. For both local and diffuse intra-articular disease open surgery is advised for recurrent disease. Marginal excision with focal disease will suffice, not dissimilar to the treatment of GCT of tendon sheath. For recurrent and extra-articular soft-tissue disease adjuvant therapy, including intra-articular radioactive colloid or moderate-dose external beam radiotherapy, should be considered.
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H J Knowles, L Moskovsky, M S Thompson, J Grunhen, X Cheng, T G Kashima, N A Athanasou (2012)  Chondroclasts are mature osteoclasts which are capable of cartilage matrix resorption.   Virchows Arch 461: 2. 205-210 Aug  
Abstract: Multinucleated cells termed chondroclasts have been observed on the deep surface of resorbed hyaline cartilage but the relationship of these cells to macrophages and osteoclasts and their role in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and other arthritic conditions is uncertain. Multinucleated cells in RA and other arthritic conditions showing evidence of cartilage resorption were characterised immunohistochemically for expression of macrophage/osteoclast markers. Mature human osteoclasts formed from circulating monocytes and tissue macrophages were cultured for up to 4 days on slices of human cartilage and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) release was measured. Multinucleated cells resorbing unmineralised cartilage were seen in osteoarthritis, RA, septic arthritis, avascular necrosis and in four cases of giant cell tumour of bone that had extended through the subchondral bone plate. Chondroclasts expressed an osteoclast-like phenotype (TRAP+, cathepsin K+, MMP9+, CD14-, HLA-DR-, CD45+, CD51+ and CD68+). Both macrophages and osteoclasts cultured on cartilage released GAG. These findings indicate that chondroclasts have an osteoclast-like phenotype and that mature human osteoclasts are capable of cartilage matrix resorption. Resorption of unmineralised subchondral cartilage by chondroclasts and macrophages can be a feature of joint destruction in inflammatory and non-inflammatory arthropathies as well as inflammatory and neoplastic subchondral bone lesions.
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Lizz van der Heijden, C L Max H Gibbons, A Bass Hassan, Judith R Kroep, Hans Gelderblom, Carla S P van Rijswijk, Remi A Nout, Kevin M Bradley, Nick A Athanasou, P D Sander Dijkstra, Pancras C W Hogendoorn, Michiel A J van de Sande (2012)  A multidisciplinary approach to giant cell tumors of tendon sheath and synovium-A critical appraisal of literature and treatment proposal.   J Surg Oncol Jul  
Abstract: Giant cell tumors deriving from synovium are classified into a localized (GCT of tendon sheath; GCT-TS) and diffuse form (diffuse-type GCT, Dt-GCT). We propose a multidisciplinary management based upon a systematic review and authors' opinion. Open excision for GCT-TS and open synovectomy (plus excision) for Dt-GCT is advised to reduce the relatively high recurrence risk. External beam radiotherapy should be considered in severe cases, as Dt-GCT commonly extends extra-articular. J. Surg. Oncol © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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Richard M Taylor, Takeshi G Kashima, Helen J Knowles, Nicholas A Athanasou (2012)  VEGF, FLT3 ligand, PlGF and HGF can substitute for M-CSF to induce human osteoclast formation: implications for giant cell tumour pathobiology.   Lab Invest 92: 10. 1398-1406 Oct  
Abstract: Giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) is a primary bone tumour that contains numerous very large, hyper-nucleated osteoclastic giant cells. Osteoclasts form from CD14+ monocytes and macrophages in the presence of receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B ligand (RANKL) and macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF). GCTB contains numerous growth factors, some of which have been reported to influence osteoclastogenesis and resorption. We investigated whether these growth factors are capable of substituting for M-CSF to support osteoclast formation from cultured human monocytes and whether they influence osteoclast cytomorphology and resorption. Vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A), VEGF-D, FLT3 ligand (FL), placental growth factor (PlGF) and hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) supported RANKL-induced osteoclastogenesis in the absence of M-CSF, resulting in the formation of numerous TRAP+ multinucleated cells capable of lacunar resorption. Monocytes cultured in the presence of M-CSF, HGF, VEGF-A and RANKL together resulted in the formation of very large, hyper-nucleated (GCTB-like) osteoclasts that were hyper-resorptive. M-CSF and M-CSF substitute growth factors were identified immunohistochemically in GCTB tissue sections and these factors stimulated the resorption of osteoclasts derived from a subset of GCTBs. Our findings indicate that there are growth factors that are capable of substituting for M-CSF to induce human osteoclast formation and that these factors are present in GCTB where they influence osteoclast cytomorphology and have a role in osteoclast formation and resorption activity.
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Carlos E de Andrea, Herman M Kroon, Ron Wolterbeek, Salvatore Romeo, Andrew E Rosenberg, Barry R De Young, Bernadette Liegl, Carrie Y Inwards, Esther Hauben, Edward F McCarthy, Miguel Idoate, Nicholas A Athanasou, Kevin B Jones, Pancras Cw Hogendoorn, Judith V M G Bovée (2012)  Interobserver reliability in the histopathological diagnosis of cartilaginous tumors in patients with multiple osteochondromas.   Mod Pathol 25: 9. 1275-1283 Sep  
Abstract: The distinction between benign and malignant cartilaginous tumors located peripherally in the bone may be a challenging task in surgical pathology. The aim of this study was to investigate interobserver reliability in histological diagnosis of cartilaginous tumors in the setting of multiple osteochondromas and to evaluate possible histological parameters that could differentiate among osteochondroma, low- and high-grade secondary peripheral chondrosarcoma. Interobserver reliability was assessed by 12 specialized bone-tumor pathologists in a set of 38 cases. Substantial agreement on diagnosis among all the reviewers was observed (intraclass correlation coefficient=0.78). Our study confirmed that mitotic figures and nuclear pleomorphism are hallmarks of high-grade secondary peripheral chondrosarcoma. However, despite the substantial agreement, we demonstrated that histology alone cannot distinguish osteochondroma from low-grade secondary peripheral chondrosarcoma in the setting of multiple osteochondromas, as nodularity, the presence of binucleated cells, irregular calcification, cystic/mucoid changes and necrosis were not helpful to indicate malignant transformation of an osteochondroma. On the other hand, among the concordant cases, the cartilage cap in osteochondroma was significantly less thicker than in low- and high-grade secondary peripheral chondrosarcoma. Therefore, our study showed that a multidisciplinary approach integrating clinical and radiographical features and the size of the cartilaginous cap in combination with a histological assessment are crucial to the diagnosis of cartilaginous tumors.
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Richard M Taylor, Takeshi G Kashima, David J Ferguson, Károly Szuhai, Pancras C Hogendoorn, Nicholas A Athanasou (2012)  Analysis of stromal cells in osteofibrous dysplasia and adamantinoma of long bones.   Mod Pathol 25: 1. 56-64 Jan  
Abstract: Adamantinoma of long bones and osteofibrous dysplasia are rare, osteolytic primary bone tumours of uncertain origin containing areas of fibrous and fibro-osseous proliferation. We investigated the nature of the stromal cells in adamantinoma of long bones and osteofibrous dysplasia, and determined cellular and molecular mechanisms of osteolysis in these tumours. Cell culture, molecular (RT-PCR, western blot) and immunohistochemical studies on cases of adamantinoma of long bones and of osteofibrous dysplasia were undertaken to determine the expression of epithelial, osteoblast and osteoclast markers. Ultrastructural and immunophenotypic studies on cultured adamantinoma and osteofibrous dysplasia stromal cells showed that these cells were mainly fibroblast-like with few cells expressing epithelial markers. Osteofibrous dysplasia but not adamantinoma cells expressed alkaline phosphatase. Both osteofibrous dysplasia and adamantinoma cells expressed the ostoclastogenic factors M-CSF and RANKL. Adamantinoma and osteofibrous dysplasia cells also expressed messenger RNA for osteocalcin, osteonectin, osteopontin, osterix and collagen type 1. Adamantinoma and osteofibrous dysplasia cells cultured alone on dentine slices were not capable of lacunar resorption, but in co-cultures with monocytes induced formation of osteoclast-like cells was observered. Cultured osteofibrous dysplasia and adamantinoma stromal cells show similar ultrastructural and immunophenotypic characteristics, and differentially express osteoblast markers. Promotion of osteoclastogenesis by stromal cells may contribute to osteolysis in adamantinoma of long bones and osteofibrous dysplasia.
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Richard Mi Taylor, Takeshi G Kashima, Francesca K E Hemingway, Arundhati Dongre, Helen J Knowles, Nicholas A Athanasou (2012)  CD14- mononuclear stromal cells support (CD14+) monocyte-osteoclast differentiation in aneurysmal bone cyst.   Lab Invest 92: 4. 600-605 Apr  
Abstract: Aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) is a benign osteolytic bone lesion in which there are blood-filled spaces separated by fibrous septa containing giant cells. The nature of the giant cells in this lesion and the mechanism of bone destruction in ABC is not certain. In this study, we have analysed several characteristics of mononuclear and multinucleated cells in the ABC and examined the cellular and molecular mechanisms of ABC osteolysis. The antigenic and functional phenotype of giant cells in ABC was determined by histochemistry/immunohistochemistry using antibodies to macrophage and osteoclast markers. Giant cells and CD14+ and CD14- mononuclear cells were isolated from ABC specimens and cultured on dentine slices and coverslips with receptor activator of nuclear factor κB ligand (RANKL)+/- macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) and functional and cytochemical evidence of osteoclast differentiation sought. Giant cells in ABC expressed an osteoclast-like phenotype (CD51+, CD14-, cathepsin K+, TRAP+) and were capable of lacunar resorption, which was inhibited by zoledronate, calcitonin and osteoprotegerin (OPG). When cultured with RANKL±M-CSF, CD14+, but not CD14-, mononuclear cells differentiated into TRAP+ multinucleated cells that were capable of lacunar resorption. M-CSF was not necessary for osteoclast formation from CD14+ cell cultures. CD14- cells variably expressed RANKL, OPG and M-CSF but supported osteoclast differentiation. Our findings show that the giant cells in ABC express an osteoclast-like phenotype and are formed from CD14+ macrophage precursors. CD14- mononuclear stromal cells express osteoclastogenic factors and most likely interact with CD14+ cells to form osteoclast-like giant cells by a RANKL-dependent mechanism.
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F Hemingway, T G Kashima, G Mahendra, A Dhongre, P C W Hogendoorn, F Mertens, N A Athanasou (2012)  Smooth muscle actin expression in primary bone tumours.   Virchows Arch 460: 5. 525-534 May  
Abstract: Alpha isoform of smooth muscle actin (SMA) expression has been reported in giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) and other benign and malignant bone tumours, but the pattern of SMA expression and the precise nature of SMA-expressing cells in these lesions is uncertain. We determined by immunohistochemistry the expression of SMA and other muscle and vascular markers in normal bone, GCTB and a wide range of primary benign and malignant bone tumours. Cultured stromal cells of GCTB, chondroblastoma (CB), and aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) were also analysed for SMA expression. SMA was only noted in blood vessels in normal bone. SMA was expressed by mononuclear stromal cells (MSC) cultured from GCTB, ABC and CB. SMA was strongly and diffusely expressed by MSC in non-ossifying fibroma, fibrous dysplasia, and "brown tumour" of hyperparathyroidism. SMA expression was also noted in GCTB, ABC, CB, chondromyxoid fibroma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma of bone and osteosarcoma. Little or no SMA was noted in Langerhans cell histiocytosis, simple bone cyst, Ewing's sarcoma, osteoblastoma, osteoid osteoma, enchondroma, osteochondroma, chondrosarcoma, myeloma, lymphoma, chordoma and adamantinoma. Our findings show that there is differential SMA expression in primary bone tumours and that identifying the presence or absence of SMA is useful in the differential diagnosis of these lesions. The nature of SMA-expressing cells in bone tumours is uncertain but they are negative for desmin and caldesmon and could represent either myofibroblasts or perivascular cells, such as pericytes.
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N M Gamage, T G Kashima, M A McNally, C L M H Gibbons, R Smith, S J Ostlere, N A Athanasou (2012)  Giant-cell-rich pseudotumour in Paget's disease.   Skeletal Radiol Dec  
Abstract: Paget's disease (PD) of the bone is a disorder of bone remodelling that may be polyostotic or monostotic. Although development of a sarcoma in PD is well-recognised, it is less well recognised that pseudosarcomas in bone and soft tissue can also arise in this condition. In this report we document the case of a large giant-cell-rich pseudotumour that developed in the tibia and overlying soft tissues in a case of polyostotic PD. Bone and soft tissues were highly vascular and contained abundant haemorrhage with focal areas of new bone formation and a diffuse infiltrate of osteoclastic giant cells. The lesion has not recurred or produced metastases 3 years after removal. Clinicians should be aware that a benign giant-cell-rich pseudotumour can develop in PD and that it needs to be distinguished from other giant-cell-rich tumours.
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Salvatore Romeo, Judith V M G Bovée, Herman M Kroon, Roberto Tirabosco, Cristina Natali, Lucia Zanatta, Raf Sciot, Fredrik Mertens, Nick Athanasou, Marco Alberghini, Karoly Szuhai, Pancras C W Hogendoorn, Angelo Paolo Dei Tos (2012)  Malignant fibrous histiocytoma and fibrosarcoma of bone: a re-assessment in the light of currently employed morphological, immunohistochemical and molecular approaches.   Virchows Arch 461: 5. 561-570 Nov  
Abstract: Malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH) and fibrosarcoma (FS) of bone are rare malignant tumours and contentious entities. Sixty seven cases labelled as bone MFH (57) and bone FS (10) were retrieved from five bone tumour referral centres and reviewed to determine whether recent advances allowed for reclassification and identification of histological subgroups with distinct clinical behaviour. A panel of immunostains was applied: smooth muscle actin, desmin, h-caldesmon, cytokeratin AE1-AE3, CD31, CD34, CD68, CD163, CD45, S100 and epithelial membrane antigen. Additional fluorescence in situ hybridisation and immunohistochemistry were performed whenever appropriate. All cases were reviewed by six bone and soft tissue pathologists and a consensus was reached. Follow-up for 43 patients (median 42 months, range 6-223 months) was available. Initial histological diagnosis was reformulated in 18 cases (26.8 %). Seven cases were reclassified as leiomyosarcoma, six as osteosarcoma, three as myxofibrosarcoma and one each as embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma and interdigitating dendritic cell sarcoma. One case showed a peculiar biphasic phenotype with epithelioid nests and myofibroblastic spindle cells. Among the remaining 48 cases, which met the WHO criteria for bone FS and bone MFH, we identified five subgroups. Seven cases were reclassified as undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma (UPS) and 11 as UPS with incomplete myogenic differentiation due to positivity for at least one myogenic marker. Six were reclassified as spindle cell sarcoma not otherwise specified. Among the remaining 24 cases, we identified a further two recurrent morphologic patterns: eight cases demonstrated a myoepithelioma-like phenotype and 16 cases a myofibroblastic phenotype. One of the myoepithelioma-like cases harboured a EWSR1-NFATC2 fusion. It appears that bone MFH and bone FS represent at best exclusion diagnoses.
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2011
Peter Balla, Linda Moskovszky, Zoltan Sapi, Ramses Forsyth, Helen Knowles, Nick A Athanasou, Miklos Szendroi, Laszlo Kopper, Hajnalka Rajnai, Ferenc Pinter, Istvan Petak, Maria Serena Benassi, Piero Picci, Amalia Conti, Tibor Krenacs (2011)  Epidermal growth factor receptor signalling contributes to osteoblastic stromal cell proliferation, osteoclastogenesis and disease progression in giant cell tumour of bone.   Histopathology 59: 3. 376-389 Sep  
Abstract: Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is implicated in bone remodelling. The aim was to determine whether EGFR protein expression contributes to the aggressiveness and recurrence potential of giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB), an osteolytic primary bone tumour that can exhibit markedly variable clinical behaviour.
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H Sadideen, N Athanasou, A Ashmore, I McNab (2011)  Heterotopic ossification in Dupuytren's disease: clinical and histological significance.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 93: 12. 1676-1678 Dec  
Abstract: We report the case of an 82-year-old man who underwent fasciectomy for a severe Dupuytren's contracture, during which an ossified lesion was encountered within the contracture and surrounding the neurovascular bundle. The abnormal tissue was removed with difficulty and heterotopic ossification was confirmed histologically. We believe this is the first report of heterotopic ossification in Dupuytren's disease.
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F Hemingway, X Cheng, H J Knowles, F Martinez Estrada, S Gordon, N A Athanasou (2011)  In vitro generation of mature human osteoclasts.   Calcif Tissue Int 89: 5. 389-395 Nov  
Abstract: Mononuclear precursors of human osteoclasts are found in the CD14(+) monocyte fraction of circulating peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). It is possible to generate osteoclasts in vitro from PBMCs cultured with macrophage colony-stimulating factor and receptor activator for nuclear factor κB ligand. In these cultures, however, it is not possible to distinguish the effect of a specific agent on osteoclast resorption activity as opposed to osteoclast differentiation. To produce a population of mature human osteoclasts to study osteoclast lacunar resorption specifically, we cultured CD14(+) human monocytes on hydrophobic dishes in order to generate and maintain osteoclasts in suspension prior to culturing them on coverslips and dentine slices. Multinucleated cells formed in these cultures expressed vitronectin receptor, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase, and cathepsin K. These cells also produced F-actin rings and were capable of extensive lacunar resorption on dentine slices after 24 h in culture. Lacunar resorption was inhibited by calcitonin and zoledronate but not by osteoprotegerin. This method of generating a highly enriched population of mature human osteoclasts should provide a valuable means of specifically assessing the effect of molecular factors (e.g., cytokines, growth factors, hormones) and therapeutic agents on osteoclast resorption activity.
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Nicolas A Athanasou (2011)  The osteoclast--what's new?   Skeletal Radiol 40: 9. 1137-1140 Sep  
Abstract: Bone resorption is required for skeletal modelling during bone growth and for mineral homeostasis and bone remodelling throughout life. Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells that are uniquely specialised to carry out this physiological bone resorption. As osteolysis is a feature of most diseases of bone and joint, osteoclasts also play a role in pathological bone resorption, the extent of which is a function of the cellular and molecular mechanisms that govern their formation and function.
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F Hemingway, R Taylor, H J Knowles, N A Athanasou (2011)  RANKL-independent human osteoclast formation with APRIL, BAFF, NGF, IGF I and IGF II.   Bone 48: 4. 938-944 Apr  
Abstract: Non-canonical pathways of osteoclastogenesis have been described in which several cytokines are able to substitute for RANKL. These cytokines are few in number and their role(s) in pathological bone resorption has not been ascertained. We have identified five additional cytokines, APRIL, BAFF, NGF, IGF I and IGF II, that can induce RANKL-independent osteoclastogenesis. All five cytokines induced both osteoclast differentiation and activation with respect to the formation of significant numbers of TRAP(+) and VNR(+) multinucleated cells that were capable of resorbing bone. The number of TRAP(+) multinucleated cells that formed was in the range of 40-75% of that supported by MCSF plus RANKL. Resorption was at a similar level to that induced by the other known RANKL substitutes TNFα, IL-6 and TGF-β. The addition of osteoprotegrin, the endogenous decoy receptor of RANKL, revealed that this resorption was independent of RANKL. APRIL, BAFF, IGF I and IGF II were found to be expressed in giant cell tumour of bone. IGF I and IGF II demonstrated very strong expression in the stromal cell population of all tumour samples. This data suggests that non-canonical osteoclastogenesis plays a role in both normal and pathological bone resorption.
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Young-Min Kwon, Simon J Ostlere, Peter McLardy-Smith, Nicholas A Athanasou, Harinderjit S Gill, David W Murray (2011)  "Asymptomatic" pseudotumors after metal-on-metal hip resurfacing arthroplasty: prevalence and metal ion study.   J Arthroplasty 26: 4. 511-518 Jun  
Abstract: Symptomatic abnormal periprosthetic soft-tissue reactions ("pseudotumors") have been reported after metal-on-metal hip resurfacing arthroplasty (MoMHRA). The aims of this study were (1) to determine the prevalence of asymptomatic pseudotumors after MoMHRA and (2) to measure metal ion levels in these patients. A total of 201 hips in 158 patients were evaluated at a mean follow-up of 61 months (range, 36-88) using ultrasound/magnetic resonance imaging and serum/hip aspirate cobalt and chromium measurements. Pseudotumors found in 7 patients (4%) were associated with significantly higher cobalt and chromium levels and inferior functional scores. Elevated levels of cobalt and chromium ions suggest that pseudotumors are associated with increased wear generated from metal-on-metal articulations. Clinicians need to be aware of pseudotumors as a differential diagnosis during clinical evaluation of MoMHRA patients, and further imaging such as ultrasound or magnetic resonance imaging is recommended to confirm the diagnosis.
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Takeshi G Kashima, Arundhati Dongre, Nicholas A Athanasou (2011)  Lymphatic involvement in vertebral and disc pathology.   Spine (Phila Pa 1976) 36: 11. 899-904 May  
Abstract: Analysis of lymphatic vessels in childhood and adult normal and pathological vertebral bone and intervertebral disc tissue.
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B J F Dean, D W Reed, J J Matthews, H Pandit, E McNally, N A Athanasou, C L M H Gibbons (2011)  The management of solitary tumours of Hoffa's fat pad.   Knee 18: 2. 67-70 Mar  
Abstract: Hoffa's fat pad (HFP) of the knee is affected by a variety of tumours and tumour-like conditions. HFP can be affected by diffuse or solitary, focal disease. This paper reports a consecutive series of 19 cases of solitary symptomatic HFP tumours. The commonest presenting symptom was anterior knee pain. All patients underwent open excision after diagnostic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Histology revealed varied diagnoses with the commonest being pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) and ganglia. American Knee Society scores improved from 76 pre-operatively to 96 post-operatively with an improvement in functional scores from 92 to 100. In conclusion the majority of solitary HFP tumours are benign and may be either cystic or solid. MRI and plain radiographs are the imaging of choice. The definitive treatments of both cystic and solid tumours should be selective arthrotomy and excision biopsy. All patients in this series reported substantial improvement in symptoms following surgery.
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Rajesh Rout, Stephen McDonnell, Richard Benson, Nicholas Athanasou, Andrew Carr, Helen Doll, Harinderjit S Gill, David W Murray, Philippa A Hulley, Andrew J Price (2011)  The histological features of anteromedial gonarthrosis--the comparison of two grading systems in a human phenotype of osteoarthritis.   Knee 18: 3. 172-176 Jun  
Abstract: Anteromedial gonarthrosis (AMG) displays a well recognised pattern of cartilage damage on the medial tibial plateau. Anteriorly there is a full thickness cartilage defect, with transition to a partial thickness defect, becoming full thickness cartilage in the posterior third of the tibial plateau. The retained posterior cartilage is macroscopically normal. This study characterises the histological changes of AMG and examines the usefulness of two histological assessment tools. Sixteen unicompartmental resection specimens of patients with primary AMG were assessed. Samples were stained with Haematoxylin and Eosin and Safranin-O stains and scored using the modified Mankin grade, and the OOCHAS assessment tool. Each specimen was assessed at five regions along the antero-posterior axis starting from the exposed bone to the region of macroscopically normal cartilage. From anterior to posterior the staining showed a consistent increase in structural integrity and cellularity of the cartilage, matched by a qualitative increase in GAG content. Mean modified Mankin and OOCHAS scores showed a progressive decrease in grade (p < 0.001). The OOCHAS grade had a good correlation with the modified Mankin grade (Ï = 0.886) and there was good intra- and inter-observer variability with both assessment tools. We conclude that there is progressive decrease in histological score from anterior to posterior in AMG and that the macroscopically normal cartilage seen posteriorly is histologically normal. Both the modified Mankin and OOOCHAS assessment tools are useful in histological grading but we found the OOCHAS easier and quicker to use. We propose that AMG represents a spatial model of progressive cartilage damage.
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D Charles Mangham, Nicholas A Athanasou (2011)  Guidelines for histopathological specimen examination and diagnostic reporting of primary bone tumours.   Clin Sarcoma Res 1: 1. Jul  
Abstract: This review is intended to provide histopathologists with guidelines for clinical assessment, specimen handling and diagnostic reporting of benign and malignant primary bone tumours. Information from radiology, surgical, oncology and other clinical colleagues involved in the diagnosis and treatment of primary bone tumours should be properly assessed before undertaking a structured approach to specimen handling and histological reporting. This ensures that the information needed for planning appropriate treatment of these complex tumours is provided. Consistency in diagnostic evaluation with respect to both terminology and report content facilitates liaison at multidisciplinary bone tumour meetings and collaboration between cancer units and networks, as well as providing a common database for audit of the clinical, radiological and pathological aspects of bone tumours.
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Michael J Lamyman, Hank P Giele, Paul Critchley, Duncan Whitwell, Max Gibbons, Nick A Athanasou (2011)  Local recurrence and assessment of sentinel lymph node biopsy in deep soft tissue leiomyosarcoma of the extremities.   Clin Sarcoma Res 1: 1. Aug  
Abstract: Leiomyosarcoma of deep soft tissues of the extremities is a rare malignant tumour treated primarily by surgery. The incidence of local recurrence and lymph node metastasis is uncertain and it is not known whether a sentinel lymph node biopsy is indicated in these tumours.
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H C Hughes, R Newnham, N Athanasou, B L Atkins, P Bejon, I C J W Bowler (2011)  Microbiological diagnosis of prosthetic joint infections: a prospective evaluation of four bacterial culture media in the routine laboratory.   Clin Microbiol Infect 17: 10. 1528-1530 Oct  
Abstract: The diagnosis of prosthetic joint infection (PJI) in the routine microbiology laboratory is labour-intensive, but semi-automated methods may be appropriate. We prospectively compared four microbiological culture methods on samples taken at prosthetic joint revision surgery. Automated BACTEC blood culture bottles and cooked meat enrichment broth were the most sensitive methods (87% and 83%, respectively, as compared with fastidious anaerobic broth (57%) and direct plates (39%)); all were highly specific (97-100%). To our knowledge, this is the first prospective study aimed at comparing culture methods in routine use in UK clinical laboratories for the diagnosis of PJI.
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Asem Shalaby, Nadège Presneau, Hongtao Ye, Dina Halai, Fitim Berisha, Bernadine Idowu, Andreas Leithner, Bernadette Liegl, Timothy R W Briggs, Krisztian Bacsi, Lars-Gunnar Kindblom, Nicholas Athanasou, Maria Fernanda Amary, Pancras C W Hogendoorn, Roberto Tirabosco, Adrienne M Flanagan (2011)  The role of epidermal growth factor receptor in chordoma pathogenesis: a potential therapeutic target.   J Pathol 223: 3. 336-346 Feb  
Abstract: Chordoma, the molecular hallmark of which is T (brachyury), is a rare malignant bone tumour with a high risk of local recurrence and a tumour from which metastatic disease is a common late event. Currently, there is no effective drug therapy for treating chordomas, although there is evidence that some patients respond to the empirical use of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) antagonists. The aim of this study was to determine the role of EGFR in the pathogenesis of chordoma. Paraffin-embedded material from 173 chordomas from 160 patients [sacro-coccygeal (n = 94), skull-based (n = 50), and mobile spine (n = 16)] was analysed by immunohistochemistry and revealed total EGFR expression in 69% of cases analysed. Of 147 informative chordomas analysed by FISH, 38% revealed high-level EGFR polysomy, 4% high-level polysomy with focal amplification, 18% low-level polysomy, and 39% disomy. Phospho-receptor tyrosine kinase array membranes showed EGFR activation in the chordoma cell line U-CH1 and all of the three chordomas analysed. Direct sequencing of EGFR (exons 18-21), KRAS, NRAS, HRAS (exons 2, 3), and BRAF (exons 11, 15) using DNA from 62 chordomas failed to reveal mutations. PTEN expression was absent by immunohistochemistry in 19 of 147 (13%) analysed chordomas, only one of which revealed high-level polysomy of EGFR. The EGFR inhibitor tyrphostin (AG 1478) markedly inhibited proliferation of the chordoma cell line U-CH1 in vitro and diminished EGFR phosphorylation in a dose-dependant manner, a finding supported by inhibition of phosphorylated Erk1/2. p-Akt was suppressed to a much lesser degree in these experiments. There was no reduction of T as assessed by western blotting. These data implicate aberrant EGFR signalling in the pathogenesis of chordoma. This study provides a strategy for patient stratification for treatment with EGFR antagonists.
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Richard Taylor, Takesh G Kashima, Helen Knowles, C L Max H Gibbons, Duncan Whitwell, Nicholas A Athanasou (2011)  Osteoclast formation and function in pigmented villonodular synovitis.   J Pathol 225: 1. 151-156 Sep  
Abstract: Pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) is a synovial tumour-like lesion that frequently causes osteolysis. PVNS contains numerous macrophages and osteoclast-like giant cells. In this study, we have analysed the cytochemical and functional characteristics of mononuclear and multinucleated cells in PVNS and determined the cellular and humoral mechanisms underlying giant cell formation and resorption in PVNS. Giant cells and CD14(+) and CD14(-) mononuclear cell populations were isolated from PVNS synovial tissue and cultured alone or in the presence and absence of the osteoclastogenic factors, RANKL and M-CSF. Osteoclast formation and activity was assessed by expression of TRAP and evidence of lacunar resorption. Giant cells in PVNS expressed an osteoclast-phenotype (CD51(+) , TRAP(+) , CD14(-) , HLA-DR(-) ) and were formed only in cultures of mononuclear cells that expressed the macrophage marker CD14. Osteoclast formation required RANKL and occurred in both the presence and absence of exogenous M-CSF. CD14(-) cells in PVNS expressed RANKL. Lacunar resorption by PVNS-derived giant cells was abolished by the addition of the bisphosphonate, zoledronate. Our findings indicate that osteoclasts form by a RANKL-dependent mechanism from CD14(+) mononuclear phagocytes in PVNS. Osteoclast formation occurred even in the absence of exogenous M-CSF, a finding which is in keeping with over-expression of M-CSF playing a pathogenic role in this condition. Anti-osteoclast resorptive treatment may be useful to control osteolysis in PVNS.
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Nadège Presneau, Asem Shalaby, Hongtao Ye, Nischalan Pillay, Dina Halai, Bernadine Idowu, Roberto Tirabosco, Duncan Whitwell, Thomas S Jacques, Lars-Gunnar Kindblom, Silke Brüderlein, Peter Möller, Andreas Leithner, Bernadette Liegl, Fernanda M Amary, Nicholas N Athanasou, Pancras Cw Hogendoorn, Fredrik Mertens, Karoly Szuhai, Adrienne M Flanagan (2011)  Role of the transcription factor T (brachyury) in the pathogenesis of sporadic chordoma: a genetic and functional-based study.   J Pathol 223: 3. 327-335 Feb  
Abstract: A variety of analyses, including fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), quantitative PCR (qPCR) and array CGH (aCGH), have been performed on a series of chordomas from 181 patients. Twelve of 181 (7%) tumours displayed amplification of the T locus and an additional two cases showed focal amplification; 70/181 (39%) tumours were polysomic for chromosome 6, and 8/181 (4.5%) primary tumours showed a minor allelic gain of T as assessed by FISH. No germline alteration of the T locus was identified in non-neoplastic tissue from 40 patients. Copy number gain of T was seen in a similar percentage of sacrococcygeal, mobile spine and base of skull tumours. Knockdown of T in the cell line, U-CH1, which showed polysomy of chromosome 6 involving 6q27, resulted in a marked decrease in cell proliferation and morphological features consistent with a senescence-like phenotype. The U-CH1 cell line was validated as representing chordoma by the generation of xenografts, which showed typical chordoma morphology and immunohistochemistry in the NOD/SCID/interleukin 2 receptor [IL2r]gammanull mouse model. In conclusion, chromosomal aberrations resulting in gain of the T locus are common in sporadic chordomas and expression of this gene is critical for proliferation of chordoma cells in vitro.
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David J Mahoney, Catherine Swales, Nicholas A Athanasou, Michele Bombardieri, Costantino Pitzalis, Karolina Kliskey, Mohammed Sharif, Anthony J Day, Caroline M Milner, Afsie Sabokbar (2011)  TSG-6 inhibits osteoclast activity via an autocrine mechanism and is functionally synergistic with osteoprotegerin.   Arthritis Rheum 63: 4. 1034-1043 Apr  
Abstract: TSG-6 (the product of tumor necrosis factor [TNF]-stimulated gene 6) has a potent inhibitory effect on RANKL-mediated bone erosion. The aim of this study was to compare the activity of TSG-6 with that of osteoprotegerin (OPG) and to investigate its role as an autocrine modulator of cytokine-mediated osteoclast formation/activation. We also determined TSG-6 expression in inflammatory joint disease.
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Francesca Maggiani, Takeshi Kashima, Simon J Ostlere, Nick A Athanasou (2011)  Immunophenotypic analysis of glomus coccygeum associated with coccygodynia.   Skeletal Radiol 40: 11. 1455-1459 Nov  
Abstract: Glomus coccygeum is a glomus body which is found in the pericoccygeal soft tissue. This specialised arteriovenous anastomosis is a non-pathological vestigial structure usually larger than its equivalent in the distal extremities. Its prevalence is uncertain. Glomus coccygeum has been associated with coccygodynia and can cause diagnostic problems to pathologists unfamiliar with this entity.
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Mark A Kemp, David E Hinsley, Stephen E Gwilym, Henk P Giele, Nicholas A Athanasou, Christopher L Gibbons (2011)  Functional and oncological outcome following marginal excision of well-differentiated forearm liposarcoma with nerve involvement.   J Hand Surg Am 36: 1. 94-100 Jan  
Abstract: Liposarcoma is one of the most common soft tissue sarcomas in adults. It is often low-grade and can occasionally involve neurovascular structures. We present the functional and oncological outcome resulting from planned marginal excision of a series of forearm low-grade liposarcomas with nerve involvement.
Notes:
Takeshi G Kashima, Arunthati Dongre, Adrienne M Flanagan, Pancras C W Hogendoorn, Richard Taylor, Nicholas A Athanasou (2011)  Podoplanin expression in adamantinoma of long bones and osteofibrous dysplasia.   Virchows Arch 459: 1. 41-46 Jul  
Abstract: Adamantinoma of long bones (ALB) and osteofibrous dysplasia (OFD) are rare osteolytic bone tumours that principally arise in the tibia. Both ALB and OFD contain epithelial and stromal elements, as well as areas of fibro-osseous proliferation. We assessed expression of podoplanin, a glycoprotein found in osteocytes, in OFD and ALB as well as in fibrous dysplasia and metastatic cancer. Forty-two cases of ALB and OFD, 20 cases of fibrous dysplasia and 20 cases of metastatic carcinoma to bone were stained by immunohistochemistry for expression of podoplanin, epithelial (cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen) and vascular (CD34, LYVE-1) markers. Podoplanin was expressed in epithelial cells and tumour glands in ALB as well as in scattered intertrabecular stromal cells in both ALB and OFD. Podoplanin was not expressed by intertrabecular stromal cells in fibrous dysplasia or in metastatic adenocarcinoma. Podoplanin was expressed by osteocytes but not osteoblasts of woven and lamellar bone trabeculae in ALB, OFD, fibrous dysplasia and skeletal metastases. The finding of a common osteocyte marker in OFD/ALB stromal cells is in keeping with a close histogenetic relationship between OFD and ALB; this may reflect the prominence of fibro-osseous proliferation in these tumours. The expression of podoplanin in an osteolytic tumour of the tibia may be useful as a diagnostic discriminant in distinguishing OFD from fibrous dysplasia and ALB from metastatic adenocarcinoma.
Notes:
Fredrik Mertens, Salvatore Romeo, Judith Vmg Bovée, Roberto Tirabosco, Nick Athanasou, Marco Alberghini, Pancras Cw Hogendoorn, Angelo P Dei Tos, Raf Sciot, Henryk A Domanski, Kristina Aström, Nils Mandahl, Maria Debiec-Rychter (2011)  Reclassification and subtyping of so-called malignant fibrous histiocytoma of bone: comparison with cytogenetic features.   Clin Sarcoma Res 1: 1. 10  
Abstract: The diagnostic entity malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH) of bone is, like its soft tissue counterpart, likely to be a misnomer, encompassing a variety of poorly differentiated sarcomas. When reviewing a series of 57 so-called MFH of bone within the framework of the EuroBoNeT consortium according to up-to-date criteria and ancillary immunohistochemistry, a fourth of all tumors were reclassified and subtyped.
Notes:
David W Murray, George Grammatopoulos, Roger Gundle, C L Max H Gibbons, Duncan Whitwell, Adrian Taylor, Sion Glyn-Jones, Hemant G Pandit, Simon Ostlere, Harinderjit S Gill, Nick Athanasou, Peter McLardy-Smith (2011)  Hip resurfacing and pseudotumour.   Hip Int 21: 3. 279-283 Jun  
Abstract: Abstract: Metal on metal hip resurfacing has been used widely over the last ten years but there has been recent concern about destructive soft tissue reactions, which have been called pseudotumours by some authors. This has generated considerable controversy. This review explains why pseudotumours occur after resurfacing and how they can be prevented. It also supports the continued use of resurfacing in appropriate patients by appropriately trained surgeons.
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Maurice Balke, Anna Neumann, Károly Szuhai, Konstantin Agelopoulos, Christian August, Georg Gosheger, Pancras Cw Hogendoorn, Nick Athanasou, Horst Buerger, Martin Hagedorn (2011)  A short-term in vivo model for giant cell tumor of bone.   BMC Cancer 11: 06  
Abstract: Because of the lack of suitable in vivo models of giant cell tumor of bone (GCT), little is known about its underlying fundamental pro-tumoral events, such as tumor growth, invasion, angiogenesis and metastasis. There is no existing cell line that contains all the cell and tissue tumor components of GCT and thus in vitro testing of anti-tumor agents on GCT is not possible. In this study we have characterized a new method of growing a GCT tumor on a chick chorio-allantoic membrane (CAM) for this purpose.
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F Maggiani, R Forsyth, P C W Hogendoorn, T Krenacs, N A Athanasou (2011)  The immunophenotype of osteoclasts and macrophage polykaryons.   J Clin Pathol 64: 8. 701-705 Aug  
Abstract: Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells which are specialised to carry out lacunar bone resorption. Osteoclasts form part of the mononuclear phagocyte system, and immunophenotypic criteria for distinction from macrophage polykaryons include expression of CD51 (vitronectin receptor) and absence of HLA-DR and CD14.
Notes:
Richard Taylor, Helen J Knowles, Nicholas A Athanasou (2011)  Ewing sarcoma cells express RANKL and support osteoclastogenesis.   J Pathol 225: 2. 195-202 Oct  
Abstract: Ewing sarcoma (ES) is a primary malignant round cell tumour of bone characterized by rapid and extensive osteolysis. Cellular mechanisms underlying the rapid bone resorption in ES have not been characterized. Osteoclasts are marrow-derived multinucleated cells that effect tumour osteolysis. The role of ES tumour cells in influencing osteoclast formation and/or directly contributing to the osteolysis in ES has not been determined. Using a tissue culture bioassay, we found that lacunar resorption is not carried out by (CD99(+) ) ES tumour cells, but by (CD68(+) ) macrophage/osteoclast-like cells; this resorption occurred in the absence of the osteoclastogenic factor, receptor activator of nuclear factor κB ligand (RANKL). ES cell lines cultured directly on dentine slices did not resorb the mineral or organic components of the bone matrix. Immunohistochemistry of ES tissue microarrays, western blotting, and RT-PCR studies showed that ES cells strongly expressed both RANKL and macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF), two major osteoclastogenic factors. When co-cultured with human monocytes, ES cells induced the formation of TRAP(+) osteoclastic cells. Conditioned medium from cultured ES cells did not result in osteoclast formation, indicating that cell-cell contact is required for ES-induced osteoclastogenesis. Our findings indicate that ES cells do not resorb bone directly but that they may support osteoclast formation by a RANKL-dependent mechanism.
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2010
S H Sheehy, B A Atkins, P Bejon, I Byren, D Wyllie, N A Athanasou, A R Berendt, M A McNally (2010)  The microbiology of chronic osteomyelitis: prevalence of resistance to common empirical anti-microbial regimens.   J Infect 60: 5. 338-343 May  
Abstract: This study describes the microbiological spectrum of chronic osteomyelitis and so guides the choice of empirical antibiotics for this condition.
Notes:
R T Steffen, N A Athanasou, H S Gill, D W Murray (2010)  Avascular necrosis associated with fracture of the femoral neck after hip resurfacing: histological assessment of femoral bone from retrieval specimens.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 92: 6. 787-793 Jun  
Abstract: The cause of fracture of the femoral neck after hip resurfacing is poorly understood. In order to evaluate the role of avascular necrosis we compared 19 femoral heads retrieved at revision for fracture of the femoral neck and 13 retrieved for other reasons. We developed a new technique of assessing avascular necrosis in the femoral head by determining the percentage of empty osteocyte lacunae present. Femoral heads retrieved as controls at total hip replacement for osteoarthritis and avascular necrosis had 9% (sd 4; n = 13) and 85% (sd 5; n = 10, p < 0.001) empty lacunae, respectively. In the fracture group the percentage of empty lacunae was 71% (sd 22); in the other group it was 21% (sd 13). The differences between the groups were highly significant (p < 0.001). We conclude that fracture after resurfacing of the hip is associated with a significantly greater percentage of empty osteocyte lacunae within the trabecular bone. This indicates established avascular necrosis and suggests that damage to the blood supply at the time of surgery is a potent risk factor for fracture of the femoral neck after hip resurfacing.
Notes:
Helen J Knowles, Anne-Marie Cleton-Jansen, Eberhard Korsching, Nicholas A Athanasou (2010)  Hypoxia-inducible factor regulates osteoclast-mediated bone resorption: role of angiopoietin-like 4.   FASEB J 24: 12. 4648-4659 Dec  
Abstract: Hypoxia and the hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) transcription factor regulate angiogenic-osteogenic coupling and osteoclast-mediated bone resorption. To determine how HIF might coordinate osteoclast and osteoblast function, we studied angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4), the top HIF target gene in an Illumina HumanWG-6 v3.0 48k array of normoxic vs. hypoxic osteoclasts differentiated from human CD14(+) monocytes (14.3-fold induction, P<0.0004). ANGPTL4 mRNA and protein were induced by 24 h at 2% O(2) in human primary osteoclasts, monocytes, and osteoblasts. ANGPTL4 protein was observed by immunofluorescence in osteoclasts and osteoblasts in vivo. Normoxic inducers of HIF (CoCl(2), desferrioxamine, and l-mimosine) and 100 ng/ml ANGPTL4 stimulated osteoclastic resorption 2- to 3-fold in assays of lacunar dentine resorption, without affecting osteoclast viability. Isoform-specific HIF-1α small interfering RNA ablated hypoxic induction of ANGPTL4 and of resorption, which was rescued by addition of exogenous ANGPTL4 (P<0.001). In the osteoblastic Saos2 cell line, ANGPTL4 caused a dose-dependent increase in proliferation (P<0.01, 100 ng/ml) and, at lower doses (1-25 ng/ml), mineralization. These results demonstrate that HIF is sufficient to enhance osteoclast-mediated bone resorption and that ANGPTL4 can compensate for HIF-1α deficiency with respect to stimulation of osteoclast activity and also augments osteoblast proliferation and differentiation.
Notes:
Helen J Knowles, Karl-Ludwig Schaefer, Uta Dirksen, Nicholas A Athanasou (2010)  Hypoxia and hypoglycaemia in Ewing's sarcoma and osteosarcoma: regulation and phenotypic effects of Hypoxia-Inducible Factor.   BMC Cancer 10: 07  
Abstract: Hypoxia regulates gene expression via the transcription factor HIF (Hypoxia-Inducible Factor). Little is known regarding HIF expression and function in primary bone sarcomas. We describe HIF expression and phenotypic effects of hypoxia, hypoglycaemia and HIF in Ewing's sarcoma and osteosarcoma.
Notes:
M Alberghini, K Kliskey, T Krenacs, P Picci, L Kindblom, R Forsyth, N A Athanasou (2010)  Morphological and immunophenotypic features of primary and metastatic giant cell tumour of bone.   Virchows Arch 456: 1. 97-103 Jan  
Abstract: Giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) is a primary tumour of bone that may rarely, in the absence of malignant cytological features, produce metastatic lesions, most commonly in the lungs. Whether these lung nodules represent true neoplastic secondaries or implants derived from the primary tumour is not certain. In this study, we have analysed the morphological and immunophenotypic features of 19 conventional GCTBs and corresponding lung nodules for expression of macrophage, osteoclast, proliferation and tumour-associated markers. A striking morphological feature of all GCTBs that produced lung secondaries was the presence of large areas of haemorrhage and thrombus formation; mononuclear and multinucleated cells of GCTB were frequently found within these areas of haemorrhage and thrombus. A similar pattern of CD14, CD33, HLA-DR and CD51 expression was seen in macrophages and giant cells in primary and secondary tumours. Smooth muscle actin expression was frequently noted in primary GCTBs that recurred and metastasised. No difference was seen in the expression of p53, p63, Ki-67, cyclin D1 or Bcl-2 in primary and secondary tumours. Our findings suggest that most lung nodules associated with primary conventional GCTBs are implants derived from tumour emboli formed in areas of haemorrhage and thrombus formation within the primary tumour.
Notes:
C L M H Gibbons, S G Sun, M Vlychou, K Kliskey, Y S Lau, A Sabokbar, N A Athanasou (2010)  Osteoclast-like cells in soft tissue leiomyosarcomas.   Virchows Arch 456: 3. 317-323 Mar  
Abstract: Giant cell-rich leiomyosarcoma of soft tissues is an unusual variant of malignant smooth muscle tumor characterized by the presence of numerous multinucleated giant cells (MNGCs). The nature of MNGCs and the cellular mechanisms underlying their accumulation in this tumor are poorly understood. Analysis of the expression of osteoclast, macrophage, and smooth muscle markers in two cases of giant cell-rich leiomyosarcoma revealed that the MNGCs in giant cell-rich leiomyosarcoma were negative for smooth muscle markers and that these cells expressed an osteoclast-like phenotype, being positive for CD45, CD68, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase, and CD51 but negative for CD14 and HLA-DR. Scattered tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) also expressed this phenotype. Leiomyosarcoma tumor cells strongly reacted for CD51 but were negative for CD14, CD45, and CD68. An analysis of 25 conventional (nongiant cell-containing) leiomyosarcomas found isolated CD68(+) MNGCs in three cases (12%), all of which were grade II/III leiomyosarcomas containing a prominent TAM infiltrate. Leiomyosarcoma-derived TAMs in the presence of receptor activator for nuclear factor kappa B ligand (RANKL) and macrophage colony-stimulating factor were capable of differentiating into osteoclast-like cells capable of resorbing bone. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction studies showed that RANKL, osteoprotegerin, and TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand were expressed by leiomyosarcoma cells. Our findings indicate that the giant cells found in leiomyosarcomas are osteoclast-like and that they are formed from TAMs by a RANKL-dependent mechanism.
Notes:
Maurice Balke, Laura Campanacci, Carsten Gebert, Piero Picci, Max Gibbons, Richard Taylor, Pancras Hogendoorn, Judith Kroep, John Wass, Nicholas Athanasou (2010)  Bisphosphonate treatment of aggressive primary, recurrent and metastatic Giant Cell Tumour of Bone.   BMC Cancer 10: 08  
Abstract: Giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB) is an expansile osteolytic tumour which contains numerous osteoclast-like giant cells. GCTB frequently recurs and can produce metastatic lesions in the lungs. Bisphosphonates are anti-resorptive drugs which act mainly on osteoclasts.
Notes:
G Mahendra, K Kliskey, N A Athanasou (2010)  Immunophenotypic distinction between pigmented villonodular synovitis and haemosiderotic synovitis.   J Clin Pathol 63: 1. 75-78 Jan  
Abstract: Haemosiderotic synovitis (HS) is caused by excessive bleeding into a joint. It occurs secondary to a variety of conditions and needs to be distinguished from pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) for the purposes of treatment. The histopathological distinction between these conditions, particularly in biopsy specimens, can be problematic.
Notes:
Linda Moskovszky, Katalin Dezsö, Nick Athanasou, Miklós Szendröi, László Kopper, Karolina Kliskey, Piero Picci, Zoltán Sápi (2010)  Centrosome abnormalities in giant cell tumour of bone: possible association with chromosomal instability.   Mod Pathol 23: 3. 359-366 Mar  
Abstract: Giant cell tumour of bone, a benign but potentially aggressive neoplasm, shows an increasing rate of chromosomal aneusomy that correlates with clinical course. Mechanisms that generate chromosomal instability in giant cell tumour of bone are poorly understood. One possible cause of chromosomal instability is an error in mitotic segregation due to numeric and/or functional abnormalities of centrosomes. Centrosome alteration is a common phenomenon in many cancers and has a major role in the development of chromosomal instability in cancer cells. To gain an insight into the possible mechanism for the generation of chromosomal instability in giant cell tumour of bone, we analysed 100 cases, including 57 primary nonrecurrent, 35 recurrent and 8 malignant giant cell tumour of bone cases. gamma-Tubulin immunohistochemistry was performed on tissue microarrays of 59 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded cases, whereas pericentrin and gamma-tubulin fluorescent immunocytochemistry was carried out on 41 frozen smears. Fluorescent in situ hybridization was performed on 23 cases of pericentrin immunostained smears, allowing the simultaneous analysis of centrosomes and chromosome aberrations. Centrosome amplification was significantly higher in recurrent and malignant giant cell tumour of bones compared with nonrecurrent tumours (P<0.001). A comparison of the percentage of aneusomic cells with a normal centrosome content (4.7%) with that of aneusomic cells with centrosome amplification (6.4%) revealed no significant association between chromosome number alterations and centrosome aberrations (P=0.31). These findings indicate that centrosome alteration and frequency of aneusomy correlate with clinical behaviour; the lack of an association between centrosome amplification and chromosome number alteration suggests that alternative causative mechanisms produce genetic instability in giant cell tumour of bone.
Notes:
Robert Grimer, Nick Athanasou, Craig Gerrand, Ian Judson, Ian Lewis, Bruce Morland, David Peake, Beatrice Seddon, Jeremy Whelan (2010)  UK Guidelines for the Management of Bone Sarcomas.   Sarcoma 2010: 12  
Abstract: These guidelines have been developed in order to provide an overview and a set of broad-based key recommendations for the management of patients with bone sarcomas in the UK. They have taken into consideration the most up-to-date scientific literature along with the recent recommendations by the European Society of Medical Oncology. The principles of the NICE guidance on both "improving outcomes for patients with sarcomas" and "improving outcomes with children and young people with cancer" have been incorporated. As care evolves, it is acknowledged that these guidelines will need updating. The key recommendations are that bone pain or a palpable mass should always lead to further investigation and patients with clinicoradiological findings suggestive of a primary bone tumour should be sent to a reference centre. Patients should then have their care managed at such a specialist centre by a fully accredited multidisciplinary team.
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2009
R T Benson, S M McDonnell, J L Rees, N A Athanasou, A J Carr (2009)  The morphological and immunocytochemical features of impingement syndrome and partial-thickness rotator-cuff tear in relation to outcome after subacromial decompression.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 91: 1. 119-123 Jan  
Abstract: We assessed the predictive value of the macroscopic and detailed microscopic appearance of the coracoacromial ligament, subacromial bursa and rotator-cuff tendon in 20 patients undergoing subacromial decompression for impingement in the absence of full-thickness tears of the rotator cuff. Histologically, all specimens had features of degenerative change and oedema in the extracellular matrix. Inflammatory cells were seen, but there was no evidence of chronic inflammation. However, the outcome was not related to cell counts. At three months the mean Oxford shoulder score had improved from 29.2 (20 to 40) to 39.4 (28 to 48) (p < 0.0001) and at six months to 45.5 (36 to 48) (p < 0.0001). At six months, although all patients had improved, the seven patients with a hooked acromion had done so to a less extent than those with a flat or curved acromion judged by their mean Oxford shoulder scores of 43.5 and 46.5 respectively (p = 0.046). All five patients with partial-thickness tears were within this group and demonstrated less improvement than the patients with no tear (mean Oxford shoulder scores 43.2 and 46.4, respectively, p = 0.04). These findings imply that in the presence of a partial-thickness tear subacromial decompression may require additional specific treatment to the rotator cuff if the outcome is to be improved further.
Notes:
H J Knowles, N A Athanasou (2009)  Canonical and non-canonical pathways of osteoclast formation.   Histol Histopathol 24: 3. 337-346 Mar  
Abstract: Physiological and pathological bone resorption is mediated by osteoclasts, multinucleated cells which are formed by the fusion of monocyte / macrophage precursors. The canonical pathway of osteoclast formation requires the presence of the receptor activator for NFkappaB ligand (RANKL) and macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF). Non-canonical pathways of osteoclast formation have been described in which cytokines / growth factors can substitute for RANKL or M-CSF to induce osteoclast formation. Substitutes for RANKL include LIGHT, TNFalpha and interleukins 6, 11 and 8. M-CSF substitutes include vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), placental growth factor (PlGF), FLt-3 ligand and hepatocyte growth factor (HGF). These growth factors can also influence canonical (RANKL / M-CSF-induced) osteoclast formation. Both canonical and non-canonical pathways of osteoclast formation play a role in the formation of osteolytic lesions where there is increased osteoclast formation and activity, such as in giant cell tumour of bone.
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Karolina Kliskey, Kelly Williams, J Yu, David Jackson, Jill Urban, Nick Athanasou (2009)  The presence and absence of lymphatic vessels in the adult human intervertebral disc: relation to disc pathology.   Skeletal Radiol 38: 12. 1169-1173 Dec  
Abstract: Although the normal adult human intervertebral disc is considered to be avascular, vascularised cellular fibrous tissue can be found in pathological conditions involving the disc such as disc herniation. Whether lymphatics vessels form a component of this reparative tissue is not known as the presence or absence of lymphatics in herniated and normal disc tissue is not known. We examined spinal tissues and discectomy specimens for the presence of lymphatics.
Notes:
Gayana Mahendra, Hemant Pandit, Karolina Kliskey, David Murray, Harinderjit Singh Gill, Nick Athanasou (2009)  Necrotic and inflammatory changes in metal-on-metal resurfacing hip arthroplasties.   Acta Orthop 80: 6. 653-659 Dec  
Abstract: Necrosis and inflammation in peri-implant soft tissues have been described in failed second-generation metal-on-metal (MoM) resurfacing hip arthroplasties and in the pseudotumors associated with these implants. The precise frequency and significance of these tissue changes is unknown.
Notes:
Helen J Knowles, Nicholas A Athanasou (2009)  Acute hypoxia and osteoclast activity: a balance between enhanced resorption and increased apoptosis.   J Pathol 218: 2. 256-264 Jun  
Abstract: Osteoclasts are the primary mediators of pathological bone resorption in many conditions in which micro-environmental hypoxia is associated with disease progression. However, effects of hypoxia on human osteoclast activity have not been reported. Mature human osteoclasts were differentiated from peripheral blood or obtained from giant cell tumour of bone. Osteoclasts were exposed to a constant hypoxic environment and then assessed for parameters including resorption (toluidine blue staining of dentine slices), membrane integrity (trypan blue exclusion), apoptosis (TUNEL, DAPI), and osteolysis-associated enzyme activity (TRAP, cathepsin K). 24 h exposure to 2% O(2) produced a 2.5-fold increase in resorption associated with increased TRAP and cathepsin K enzyme activity. Hypoxia-Inducible Factor-1alpha (HIF-1alpha) siRNA completely ablated the hypoxic increase in osteoclast resorption. 24 h at 2% O(2) also increased the number of osteoclasts with compromised membrane integrity from 6% to 21%, with no change in the total osteoclast number or the proportion of late-stage apoptotic cells. Transient reoxygenation returned the percentage of trypan blue-positive cells to normoxic levels, suggesting that osteoclasts can recover from the early stages of cell death. Repeated over an extended period, hypoxia/reoxygenation enhanced osteoclast differentiation at this pO(2). These data suggest that in diseased bone, where the pO(2) may fall to <or=2% O(2), a delicate balance between hypoxia-induced osteoclast activation and hypoxia-induced osteoclast apoptosis mediates pathological bone resorption.
Notes:
2008
H J Knowles, N A Athanasou (2008)  Hypoxia-inducible factor is expressed in giant cell tumour of bone and mediates paracrine effects of hypoxia on monocyte-osteoclast differentiation via induction of VEGF.   J Pathol 215: 1. 56-66 May  
Abstract: Hypoxia is an important regulator of bone biology and stimulates osteoclast differentiation from monocytic precursors. Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) is a key pro-tumourigenic transcription factor mediating pathways of hypoxia-inducible gene expression. We have described expression of HIF-1alpha and HIF-2alpha in the multi-nucleated, osteoclast-like giant cells and the mononuclear stromal component of giant cell tumour of bone (GCTB), a locally osteolytic primary bone tumour. HIF induction was observed in culture in the osteoblastic MG-63 cell line, primary GCTB stromal cells, and monocyte-derived osteoclasts following stimulation with hypoxia (0.1% O2) or the osteoclastogenic cytokines hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF). This was accompanied by increased expression of the downstream target genes Bcl-2/adenovirus E1B 19 kD-interacting protein 3 (BNIP3), Glut-1, and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). As VEGF can substitute for M-CSF to support osteoclastogenesis in the presence of receptor activator for nuclear factor kappaB ligand (RANKL), we assessed the effect of MG-63 hypoxic conditioned media on osteoclast differentiation. In the presence of RANKL, hypoxic conditioned media induced the formation of active osteoclasts, as assessed from the numbers of TRAP-positive multi-nucleated cells and the area of lacunar bone resorption, which was inhibited by co-incubation with a neutralizing anti-VEGF antibody. Targeted siRNA ablated HIF-1alpha and/or HIF-2alpha expression in MG-63 cells and reduced hypoxic secretion of VEGF. Hypoxic conditioned media from cells treated with siRNA for (HIF-1alpha + HIF-2alpha) produced a significant decrease in osteoclast number (p < 0.005) and activity (p < 0.05) in comparison with the scrambled siRNA control. These results suggest that local hypoxia could indirectly influence osteoclastogenesis via autocrine and paracrine secretion of VEGF under the control of HIF. This is potentially an important mechanism of pathogenesis for GCTB and other osteolytic lesions.
Notes:
Fadil M Hannan, Nicholas A Athanasou, James Teh, Christopher L M H Gibbons, Brian Shine, Rajesh V Thakker (2008)  Oncogenic hypophosphataemic osteomalacia: biomarker roles of fibroblast growth factor 23, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 and lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronan receptor 1.   Eur J Endocrinol 158: 2. 265-271 Feb  
Abstract: Oncogenic osteomalacia (OOM) is characterised by tumour production of fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) that results in hypophosphataemia and renal phosphate wasting, reduced 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3) synthesis and osteomalacia. Here, we demonstrate the roles of serum FGF23 and 1,25(OH)2D3, together with the lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronan receptor 1 (LYVE-1), as biomarkers for OOM. A previously well 52-year-old man presented with a 2-year history of generalised musculoskeletal pain and proximal myopathy. He had hypophosphataemia, elevated serum alkaline phosphatase activity, low serum 1,25(OH)2D3 and a reduced tubular maximum of phosphate/glomerular filtration rate. These findings indicated a diagnosis of OOM, but magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and octreotide scintigraphy did not identify any tumours. Treatment with oral phosphate and calcitriol resolved the symptoms and biochemical abnormalities within 6 months. Four years later, he relapsed whilst on treatment with oral phosphate and calcitriol. Serum FGF23 concentration was elevated and MRI identified a 2 cm tumour within Hoffa's fat pad of the left knee. Removal of the tumour resulted in a complete resolution of symptoms and normalisation of the serum biochemical abnormalities including serum FGF23. Histology demonstrated a phosphaturic mesenchymal tumour, mixed connective tissue variant (PMTMCT), which revealed immunostaining with anti-LYVE-1 antibody and hence the presence of lymphatic vessels. Serum FGF23 and 1,25(OH)2D3 were found to be reliable biomarkers for OOM. In addition, the demonstration of lymphatics in the PMTMCT helps to distinguish this tumour from most typical benign haemangiomas.
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M Vlychou, N A Athanasou (2008)  Radiological and pathological diagnosis of paediatric bone tumours and tumour-like lesions.   Pathology 40: 2. 196-216 Feb  
Abstract: Primary bone tumours are rare but account for a significant proportion of cancers occurring in childhood and adolescence. Malignant bone tumours need to be distinguished not only from their benign counterparts but also from tumour-like lesions, many of which are developmental or reactive in nature and are found commonly in the paediatric population. Taking note of the age of the patient and the site of the lesion within bone (aided by several imaging techniques including plain radiographs, ultrasound, computed tomography, bone scintigraphy and magnetic resonance imaging) is essential for pathological diagnosis. Immunohistochemistry, cytogenetics, molecular analysis and other techniques are now powerful diagnostic tools in bone pathology. This review aims to provide an approach to the radiological and pathological diagnosis of paediatric bone tumours. It also provides a brief overview of some of the more common bone tumours and tumour-like lesions, both benign and malignant, which occur in childhood and adolescence.
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James R Edwards, Kelly Williams, Lars G Kindblom, Jeanne M Meis-Kindblom, Pancras C W Hogendoorn, David Hughes, Ramses G Forsyth, David Jackson, Nicholas A Athanasou (2008)  Lymphatics and bone.   Hum Pathol 39: 1. 49-55 Jan  
Abstract: There is controversy regarding whether lymphatic vessels are present or absent in bone. Although lymphangiomas have been described in bone, lymphatic vessels have not been identified morphologically with certainty in any other benign or malignant bone tumors or in normal human bone. In this study, we determined by immunohistochemistry, using 2 specific lymphatic endothelial cell markers, LYVE-1 and podoplanin, whether lymphatics are present in normal bone and a wide range of primary and secondary bone neoplasms. In normal bone, LYVE-1+/podoplanin+ lymphatic vessels were not identified in cortical or cancellous bone but were seen in connective tissue overlying the periosteum. With the exception of lymphangioma, Gorham-Stout disease, and hemangioendothelioma, primary benign and malignant bone tumors (as well as secondary carcinomas) that were confined to bone did not contain lymphatic vessels. Primary and secondary bone tumors that had extended through the bone cortex contained LYVE-1+/podoplanin+ lymphatic vessels that seemed to extend for a short distance from surrounding soft tissues into the tumor. Three cases of osteosarcoma that had extended through the bone cortex and had lymph node metastases were all found to contain lymphatic vessels within the tumor. These results indicate that the lymphatic circulation is unlikely to play a role in bone fluid transport in normal bone and that lymphatic vessels are absent from most primary and secondary tumors confined to bone. These findings also suggest that lymphangiogenesis is not involved in the disease progression of most primary bone tumors and that carcinomatous metastasis to bone does not occur via lymphatics.
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Dominic Furniss, Marc C Swan, Daniel G Morritt, Joanna Lim, Tarun Khanna, Benjamin L M Way, Nick A Athanasou, Henk Giele, Paul Critchley (2008)  A 10-year review of benign and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors in a single center: clinical and radiographic features can help to differentiate benign from malignant lesions.   Plast Reconstr Surg 121: 2. 529-533 Feb  
Abstract: Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors are rare, and their aggressive nature mandates treatment in specialist centers. In contrast, benign peripheral nerve sheath tumors are common and are treated by a variety of specialist surgeons, including plastic surgeons. The authors aimed to detect features in the clinical presentation of peripheral nerve sheath tumors that point toward a diagnosis of malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor and therefore prompt referral to a specialist center.
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H Pandit, M Vlychou, D Whitwell, D Crook, R Luqmani, S Ostlere, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (2008)  Necrotic granulomatous pseudotumours in bilateral resurfacing hip arthoplasties: evidence for a type IV immune response.   Virchows Arch 453: 5. 529-534 Nov  
Abstract: Clinical, radiological and histological findings were analysed in four patients who developed bilateral pseudotumours following metal-on-metal (MoM) resurfacing arthroplasties of both hips. Using a panel of monoclonal antibodies directed against HLA-DR, macrophages (CD14, CD68), dendritic cells (DC-SIGN, S100, CD11c), B cells (CD20), and T cells (CD3, CD4, CD8), the nature of the heavy inflammatory response seen in these cases was examined. Bilateral masses developed in periprosthetic soft tissues following the second MoM arthroplasty; these were characterised histologically by extensive coagulative necrosis, a heavy macrophage infiltrate and the presence of granulomas containing macrophages and giant cells; there was also a diffuse lymphocyte and variable plasma cell and eosinophil polymorph infiltrate. Immunohistochemistry showed strong expression of HLA-DR, CD14 and CD68 in both granulomatous and necrotic areas; lymphocytes were predominantly CD3+/CD4+ T cells. The clinical, morphological and immunophenotypic features of these necrotic granulomatous pseudotumours, which in all cases develop following a second resurfacing hip arthroplasty, is suggestive of a type IV immune response, possibly to MoM metal alloy components.
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G Mahendra, K Kliskey, K Williams, K Hollowood, D Jackson, N A Athanasou (2008)  Intratumoural lymphatics in benign and malignant soft tissue tumours.   Virchows Arch 453: 5. 457-464 Nov  
Abstract: Soft tissue sarcomas do not generally metastasise via lymphatics, and the presence or absence of lymphatic vessels within sarcomas and benign soft tissue tumours is not known. In this study, we determined whether lymphatic vessels were present in a wide range of benign and malignant soft tissue lesions by examining intratumoural expression of the lymphatic endothelial cell markers, Lyve-1 and podoplanin. Intratumoural Lyve-1+/podoplanin+ lymphatics were not identified in sarcomas apart from all cases of epithelioid sarcoma (a tumour which is known to metastasise to lymph nodes) and a few cases of leiomyosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and synovial sarcoma. Intratumoural lymphatics were also absent in most benign soft tissue tumours. Reparative and inflammatory soft tissue lesions contained lymphatics, as did all (pseudosarcomatous) proliferative myofibroblastic lesions including nodular, proliferative and ischaemic fasciitis, elastofibroma, nuchal fibroma and deep fibromatosis. Our results show that most soft tissue sarcomas do not contain intratumoural lymphatics, a finding which is consistent with the infrequent finding of sarcoma metastasis to lymph nodes. In contrast to fibrosarcoma and a number of other malignant spindle cell tumours, proliferative fibroblastic/myofibroblastic lesions of soft tissue contain intralesional lymphatic vessels.
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S M J Harney, C Vilariño-Güell, I E Adamopoulos, A - M Sims, R W Lawrence, L R Cardon, J L Newton, C Meisel, J J Pointon, C Darke, N Athanasou, B P Wordsworth, M A Brown (2008)  Fine mapping of the MHC Class III region demonstrates association of AIF1 and rheumatoid arthritis.   Rheumatology (Oxford) 47: 12. 1761-1767 Dec  
Abstract: The heritability of RA has been estimated to be approximately 55%, of which the MHC contributes about one-third. HLA-DRB1 alleles are strongly associated with RA, but it is likely that significant non-DRB1 MHC genetic susceptibility factors are involved. Previously, we identified two three-marker haplotypes in a 106-kb region in the MHC class III region immediately centromeric to TNF, which are strongly associated with RA on HLA-DRB1*0404 haplotypes. In the present study, we aimed to refine these associations further using a combination of genotyping and gene expression studies.
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H Pandit, S Glyn-Jones, P McLardy-Smith, R Gundle, D Whitwell, C L M Gibbons, S Ostlere, N Athanasou, H S Gill, D W Murray (2008)  Pseudotumours associated with metal-on-metal hip resurfacings.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 90: 7. 847-851 Jul  
Abstract: We report 17 patients (20 hips) in whom metal-on-metal resurfacing had been performed and who presented with various symptoms and a soft-tissue mass which we termed a pseudotumour. Each patient underwent plain radiography and in some, CT, MRI and ultrasonography were also performed. In addition, histological examination of available samples was undertaken. All the patients were women and their presentation was variable. The most common symptom was discomfort in the region of the hip. Other symptoms included spontaneous dislocation, nerve palsy, a noticeable mass or a rash. The common histological features were extensive necrosis and lymphocytic infiltration. To date, 13 of the 20 hips have required revision to a conventional hip replacement. Two are awaiting revision. We estimate that approximately 1% of patients who have a metal-on-metal resurfacing develop a pseudotumour within five years. The cause is unknown and is probably multifactorial. There may be a toxic reaction to an excess of particulate metal wear debris or a hypersensitivity reaction to a normal amount of metal debris. We are concerned that with time the incidence of these pseudotumours may increase. Further investigation is required to define their cause.
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James Edwards, Eva Schulze, Afsie Sabokbar, Helen Gordon-Andrews, David Jackson, Nicholas Anthony Athanasou (2008)  Absence of lymphatics at the bone-implant interface: implications for periprosthetic osteolysis.   Acta Orthop 79: 2. 289-294 Apr  
Abstract: Wear particles, found at the bone-implant interface surrounding a loose prosthesis, are commonly phagocytosed by macrophages. Wear particles and wear particle-containing macrophages are also found in regional lymph nodes draining arthroplasty tissues. The means by which wear particles are transported from arthroplasty tissues to lymph nodes is uncertain, as the presence or absence of lymphatic vessels in periprosthetic tissues has not been established.
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Manoj Sivan, Deepa Bose, Nick Athanasou, Martin McNally (2008)  Mycobacterium marinum osteomyelitis of a long bone.   Joint Bone Spine 75: 5. 600-602 Oct  
Abstract: Mycobacterium marinum can uncommonly cause osteomyelitis of small bones of extremities. The reported cases in literature are reviewed. We report a rare case of long bone osteomyelitis which as far as we are aware, has never been described before. Even though this organism normally causes infection in the superficial cooler regions of the body, clinicians should be aware of the possibility of long bone osteomyelitis in patients with a history of immune compromise and the appropriate treatment strategy in such cases.
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Christopher S J Fang, Paul Harvie, Christopher L M H Gibbons, Duncan Whitwell, Nicholas A Athanasou, Simon Ostlere (2008)  The imaging spectrum of peri-articular inflammatory masses following metal-on-metal hip resurfacing.   Skeletal Radiol 37: 8. 715-722 Aug  
Abstract: Resurfacing metal-on-metal hip arthroplasty is increasing in popularity, especially in younger patients. To date, studies indicate that the procedure is associated with a good outcome in the medium-term. Formation of a peri-articuar mass is a rarely reported complication. In this study we analyse the imaging findings in patients with resurfacing implants presenting to our institution with peri-articular masses identified on cross sectional imaging.
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Roberto Tirabosco, D Chas Mangham, Andrew E Rosenberg, Sonja Vujovic, Konstantinos Bousdras, Stefano Pizzolitto, Giovanna De Maglio, Michael A den Bakker, Lisa Di Francesco, Ricardo K Kalil, Nicholas A Athanasou, Paul O'Donnell, Edward F McCarthy, Adrienne M Flanagan (2008)  Brachyury expression in extra-axial skeletal and soft tissue chordomas: a marker that distinguishes chordoma from mixed tumor/myoepithelioma/parachordoma in soft tissue.   Am J Surg Pathol 32: 4. 572-580 Apr  
Abstract: Axial chordoma represents approximately 1% of malignant bone tumors. This tumor expresses cytokeratins, specifically cytokeratin 19, and commonly S100. More recently brachyury, a transcription factor important in mesodermal differentiation, including notochord development, has been detected by immunohistochemistry in axial chordomas and hemangioblastomas but not chondrosarcomas or other neoplasms. In this report, we describe 10 cases (6 men, 4 women: age 18 to 68 y; mean 44.6) of extra-axial tumors, 8 in bone and 2 in soft tissue, with morphologic and immunohistochemical features identical to those of axial chordoma. Imaging excluded metastases from axial chordoma. Three tumors occurred in the tibia, the others in the rib, metatarsal, ulna, femur, pubis: 2 intracortical, 6 intramedullary. Both soft tissue brachyury-positive tumors, one involving the thumb the other the wrist, were sited in the juxta-articular region. Seven of the tumors were widely excised and these patients are disease-free but of the 3 tumors that recurred, 1 was curetted, 1 was marginally excised, and 1 had a pathologic fracture on presentation. Metastases have not occurred in any of the patients. We also confirm the expression of brachyury in hemangioblastomas, and for the first time demonstrates its expression in spermatogonia and testicular germ cell tumors by immunohistochemistry. Brachyury was not detected in a wide range of tumors including carcinomas, lymphomas, and sarcomas. In conclusion, we describe the first series of extra-axial skeletal chordomas bringing the total number of such cases reported in the literature to 11, and present the first report of 2 soft tissue chordomas as defined by brachyury expression.
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2007
T Theologis, S Ostlere, C L M H Gibbons, N A Athanasou (2007)  Toxic osteoblastoma of the scapula.   Skeletal Radiol 36: 3. 253-257 Mar  
Abstract: Osteoblastoma rarely occurs in the scapula, and toxic osteoblastoma is a very rare subtype of this bone-forming tumour. This report details the clinical, radiological and pathological features of a toxic osteoblastoma of the scapula; it is the first reported case to be diagnosed correctly pre-operatively and treated appropriately by excision.
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A Rigopoulou, M Vlychou, S J Ostlere, C L M H Gibbons, N A Athanasou (2007)  A primary leiomyosarcoma of bone containing pseudoepithelial plexiform elements.   Skeletal Radiol 36: 8. 791-796 Aug  
Abstract: A rare but distinctive variant of smooth muscle tumours that occurs almost exclusively in the uterus is characterised by the presence of plexiform tumourlets, which are composed of clumps and cords of tumour cells that form a discrete pseudoepithelial component. We report on a case of a primary leiomyosarcoma of the proximal humerus, which, in addition to characteristic histological and immunophenotypic features of leiomyosarcoma, contained plexiform tumourlets. Tumour cells in the plexiform component focally expressed muscle/smooth muscle actin, calponin and cytokeratin. Spindle-shaped and epithelioid smooth muscle tumour cells also expressed the above antigens. This is the first report of a plexiform smooth muscle tumour arising in bone. This case is remarkable, not only for being only the second reported case of a malignant plexiform smooth muscle tumour, but also for being one of very few examples of this type of tumour arising outside the uterus; it also is unique in having arisen in a male patient. This variant of primary leiomyosarcoma needs to be distinguished from other bone tumours containing epithelial elements, notably metastatic carcinoma.
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Y S Lau, L Danks, S G Sun, S Fox, A Sabokbar, A Harris, N A Athanasou (2007)  RANKL-dependent and RANKL-independent mechanisms of macrophage-osteoclast differentiation in breast cancer.   Breast Cancer Res Treat 105: 1. 7-16 Sep  
Abstract: The cellular and humoral mechanisms accounting for tumour osteolysis in metastatic breast cancer are uncertain. Osteoclasts, the specialised multinucleated cells responsible for tumour osteolysis, are derived from monocyte/macrophage precursors. Breast cancer-derived tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) are capable of osteoclast differentiation but the cellular and humoral mechanisms controlling this activity are uncertain. In this study, TAMs were isolated from primary breast cancers and cultured in the presence and absence of cytokines/growth factors influencing osteoclastogenesis. Extensive TAM-osteoclast differentiation occurred only in the presence of RANKL and M-CSF; this process was inhibited by OPG and RANK:Fc, decoy receptors for RANKL. Breast cancer-derived fibroblasts and human bone stromal cells expressed mRNA for RANKL, OPG and TRAIL, and co-culture of these fibroblasts with human monocytes stimulated osteoclast formation by a RANKL-dependent mechanism. Osteoclast formation and lacunar resorption also occurred by a RANKL-independent mechanism when the conditioned medium from breast cancer cells, MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7, was added (with M-CSF) to monocyte cultures. Our findings indicate that TAMs in breast cancer are capable of osteoclast differentiation and that breast cancer-derived fibroblasts and breast cancer cells contribute to this process by producing soluble factors that influence osteoclast formation by RANKL-dependent and RANKL-independent mechanisms respectively.
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M Vlychou, S J Ostlere, R Kerr, N A Athanasou (2007)  Low-grade osteosarcoma of the ethmoid sinus.   Skeletal Radiol 36: 5. 459-462 May  
Abstract: Osteosarcoma uncommonly arises in craniofacial bones and has only rarely been reported to arise in the ethmoid sinus. Most primary osteosarcomas arising in paranasal sinuses are high-grade malignancies. A low-grade osteosarcoma arising in the ethmoid sinus has not previously been described. We report the clinical, radiological and histological findings of a case of low-grade (parosteal osteosarcoma-like) osteosarcoma which arose in the ethmoid sinus.
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Y S Lau, I E Adamopoulos, A Sabokbar, H Giele, C L M H Gibbons, N A Athanasou (2007)  Cellular and humoral mechanisms of osteoclast formation in Ewing's sarcoma.   Br J Cancer 96: 11. 1716-1722 Jun  
Abstract: Cellular mechanisms that account for tumour osteolysis associated with Ewing's sarcoma are uncertain. Osteoclasts are marrow-derived multinucleated cells (MNCs) that effect tumour osteolysis. Osteoclasts are known to form from macrophages by both receptor activator for nuclear factor-kappaB (RANK) ligand (RANKL)-dependent and -independent mechanisms. In this study, our aim has been to determine whether tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) isolated from Ewing's sarcoma are capable of differentiating into osteoclasts and to characterise the cellular and humoral mechanisms whereby this occurs. Tumour-associated macrophages were isolated from two Ewing's sarcomas and cultured on both coverslips and dentine slices for up to 21 days with soluble RANKL and macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF). Osteoclast formation from TAMs (CD14+) was evidenced by the formation of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) and vitronectin receptor (VNR)-positive MNCs, which were capable of carrying out lacunar resorption. This osteoclast formation was inhibited by the addition of bisphosphonates. Both Ewing's sarcoma-derived fibroblasts and some bone stromal cells expressed RANKL and supported osteoclast formation by a contact-dependent mechanism. We also found that osteoclast differentiation occurred when Ewing's TAMs were cultured with tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha in the presence of M-CSF and that TC71 Ewing's sarcoma cells stimulated osteoclast formation through the release of a soluble factor, the action of which was abolished by an antibody to TNF-alpha. These results indicate that TAMs in Ewing's sarcoma are capable of osteoclast differentiation by both RANKL-dependent and TNF-alpha-dependent mechanisms and that Ewing's sarcoma cells produce osteoclastogenic factor(s). Our findings suggest that anti-resorptive and anti-osteoclastogenic therapies may be useful in inhibiting the osteolysis of Ewing's sarcoma.
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G C R Hand, N A Athanasou, T Matthews, A J Carr (2007)  The pathology of frozen shoulder.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 89: 7. 928-932 Jul  
Abstract: We treated 22 patients with a diagnosis of primary frozen shoulder resistant to conservative treatment by manipulation under anaesthetic and arthroscopic release of the rotator interval, at a mean time from onset of 15 months (3 to 36). Biopsies were taken from this site and histological and immunocytochemical analysis was performed to identify the types of cell present. The tissue was characterised by the presence of fibroblasts, proliferating fibroblasts and chronic inflammatory cells. The infiltrate of chronic inflammatory cells was predominantly made up of mast cells, with T cells, B cells and macrophages also present. The pathology of frozen shoulder includes a chronic inflammatory response with fibroblastic proliferation which may be immunomodulated.
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N A Athanasou (2007)  Peri-implant pathology--relation to implant failure and tumor formation.   J Long Term Eff Med Implants 17: 3. 193-206  
Abstract: Despite the clinical effectiveness ofjoint replacement arthroplasty, a number of complications, most of which present clinically with signs and symptoms related to implant loosening, are associated with this procedure. Histological changes that occur in soft tissue and bone around an implant provide diagnostic information on the causes of implant loosening and give clues as to the nature of the pathological processes that lead to this and other complications of implant-related joint disease. These pathological processes include the biologically nonspecific body macrophage response to wear particles (aseptic loosening), a specific hypersensitivity immune reaction to implant-derived wear particles, infection (septic loosening), primary joint-related pathology in revision arthroplasty tissues, and tumor formation in peri-implant tissues. This review outlines pathological changes that reflect pathogenetic mechanisms contributing to implant loosening and other complications in peri-implant tissues.
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K Williams, A Flanagan, A Folpe, R Thakker, N A Athanasou (2007)  Lymphatic vessels are present in phosphaturic mesenchymal tumours.   Virchows Arch 451: 5. 871-875 Nov  
Abstract: Oncogenic osteomalacia (OO) is an acquired form of hypophosphataemic osteomalacia, which is associated most commonly with the development of a benign phosphaturic mesenchymal tumour mixed connective tissue type (PMTMCT). PMTMCTs are generally well vascularised tumours, and many have in the past been classified as haemangiomas and haemangiopericytomas. Although these tumours show some morphological variation, it has been proposed that they represent a distinct histopathological entity. Our aim in this study was to determine by immunohistochemistry the vascular profile of PMTMCT. Using monoclonal antibodies directed against several vascular markers, including the lymphatic endothelial cell antigens LYVE 1 and podoplanin, we found that PMTMCTs, in contrast to haemangiomas and haemangiopericytomas, contain lymphatic vessels. Taken with previous observations that PMTMCTs overexpress FGF23 and other gene products, this finding provides further evidence that most osteomalacia associated mesenchymal tumours represent a discrete pathological entity.
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Abigail Smithard, Michael J Lamyman, Catherine L McCarthy, C L M H Gibbons, Paul J Cooke, Nicholas Athanasou (2007)  Cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis presenting with bilateral Achilles tendon xanthomata.   Skeletal Radiol 36: 2. 171-175 Feb  
Abstract: We report on a case of a 36-year-old lady who presented with large, painful soft-tissue swellings of both Achilles tendons. MRI demonstrated fusiform enlargement involving the Achilles tendons bilaterally. The tendons returned heterogeneous signal intensity characterised by a diffuse reticulated appearance. The right tendon mass was treated with a wide marginal excision and Achilles tendon reconstruction. The histology confirmed Achilles tendon xanthoma. Further metabolic investigation revealed the patient to have a rare autosomal recessive condition called cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis (CTX). Her brother was also affected. CTX is easily treatable if diagnosed early, and should be suspected in patients presenting with bilateral Achilles tendon xanthomas and normal plasma lipid levels.
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2006
Y S Lau, A Sabokbar, H Giele, V Cerundolo, W Hofstetter, N A Athanasou (2006)  Malignant melanoma and bone resorption.   Br J Cancer 94: 10. 1496-1503 May  
Abstract: The cellular and humoral mechanisms accounting for osteolysis in skeletal metastases of malignant melanoma are uncertain. Osteoclasts, the specialised multinucleated cells that carry out bone resorption, are derived from monocyte/macrophage precursors. We isolated tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) from metastatic (lymph node/skin) melanomas and cultured them in the presence and absence of osteoclastogenic cytokines and growth factors. The effect of tumour-derived fibroblasts and melanoma cells on osteoclast formation and resorption was also analysed. Melanoma TAMs (CD14+/CD51-) differentiated into osteoclasts (CD14-/CD51+) in the presence of receptor activator for nuclear factor kappaB ligand (RANKL) and macrophage-colony stimulating factor. Tumour-associated macrophage-osteoclast differentiation also occurred via a RANKL-independent pathway when TAMs were cultured with tumour necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin (IL)-1alpha. RT-PCR showed that fibroblasts isolated from metastatic melanomas expressed RANKL messenger RNA and the conditioned medium of cultured melanoma fibroblasts was found to be capable of inducing osteoclast formation in the absence of RANKL; this effect was inhibited by the addition of osteoprotegerin (OPG). We also found that cultured human SK-Mel-29 melanoma cells produce a soluble factor that induces osteoclast differentiation; this effect was not inhibited by OPG. Our findings indicate that TAMs in metastatic melanomas can differentiate into osteoclasts and that melanoma fibroblasts and melanoma tumour cells can induce osteoclast formation by RANKL-dependent and RANKL-independent mechanisms, respectively.
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Iannis E Adamopoulos, Lynett Danks, Ichiro Itonaga, Rachel M Locklin, Afsie Sabokbar, David J P Ferguson, Nicholas A Athanasou (2006)  Stimulation of osteoclast formation by inflammatory synovial fluid.   Virchows Arch 449: 1. 69-77 Jul  
Abstract: Peri-articular bone resorption is a feature of arthritis due to crystal deposition and rheumatoid disease. Under these conditions, the synovial fluid contains numerous inflammatory cells that produce cytokines and growth factors which promote osteoclast formation. The aim of this study was to determine whether inflammatory synovial fluid stimulates the formation of osteoclasts. Synovial fluid from rheumatoid arthritis (RA), pyrophosphate arthropathy (PPA) and osteoarthritis (OA) patients was added to cultures (n=8) of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in the presence and absence of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) and the receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand (RANKL). Osteoclast formation was assessed by the formation of cells positive for tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) and vitronectin receptor (VNR) and the extent of lacunar resorption. The addition of 10% OA, RA and PPA synovial fluid to PBMC cultures resulted in the formation of numerous multinucleated or mononuclear TRAP(+) and VNR(+) cells which were capable of lacunar resorption. In contrast to PBMC cultures incubated with OA synovial fluid, there was marked stimulation of osteoclast formation and resorption in cultures containing inflammatory RA and PPA synovial fluid which contained high levels of tumour necrosis factor alpha, a factor which is known to stimulate RANKL-induced osteoclast formation.
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J R Edwards, S G Sun, R Locklin, C M Shipman, I E Adamopoulos, N A Athanasou, A Sabokbar (2006)  LIGHT (TNFSF14), a novel mediator of bone resorption, is elevated in rheumatoid arthritis.   Arthritis Rheum 54: 5. 1451-1462 May  
Abstract: Human osteoclast formation from mononuclear phagocyte precursors involves interactions between tumor necrosis factor (TNF) ligand superfamily members and their receptors. LIGHT is a transmembrane protein expressed and shed from the surface of activated T cells. Since activated T cells have been implicated in osteoclastogenesis in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), this study sought to determine whether LIGHT can regulate RANKL/cytokine-induced osteoclast formation, to identify the mechanism by which LIGHT influences osteoclastogenesis, and to investigate the presence of LIGHT in the serum of RA patients.
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Yu Sin Lau, Wilson Wang, Afsaneh Sabokbar, Hamish Simpson, Sean Nair, Brian Henderson, Anthony Berendt, Nicholas A Athanasou (2006)  Staphylococcus aureus capsular material promotes osteoclast formation.   Injury 37 Suppl 2: S41-S48 May  
Abstract: Osteomyelitis, which is most frequently due to infection by Staphylococcus aureus, commonly causes bone destruction. S. aureus is known to secrete a number of surface-associated proteins that are potent stimulators of bone resorption. The precise cellular and humoral mechanisms that mediate this stimulatory effect are uncertain. In this study, we have determined whether osteoclast formation and resorption is directly promoted by surface-associated proteins. Surface-associated material (SAM) obtained from a 24-hour culture of S. aureus was added to cultures of mouse and human monocytes. Human monocyte cultures were incubated in the presence and absence of a soluble receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B ligand (RANKL) and macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF). In cultures where M-CSF, RANKL, and SAM were added together, osteoclast formation did not exceed that seen in cultures with M-CSF and RANKL. In keeping with this finding, SAM did not increase osteoclast formation and resorption when mouse monocytes were cocultured with RANKL-expressing osteoblasts. In the absence of RANKL, however, SAM was capable of inducing osteoclast formation in cultures of human monocytes. This finding was evidenced by the generation of vitronectin receptor and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatasepositive multinucleated cells that were capable of lacunar resorption. Inhibitors of RANKL-dependent (RANK:Fc, OPG) and RANKL-independent (anti-TNF-alpha, gp130, IL-8, TGF-beta) osteoclast formation did not inhibit SAM-induced osteoclast formation. SAM did not stimulate mature osteoclast resorption activity. These findings indicate that RANKL, which is present in the circulation as a soluble factor, does not play a role in osteoclast formation in the presence of S. aureus SAM and that S. aureus SAM contains a soluble factor that promotes osteoclast formation by a RANKL-independent mechanism.
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Iannis E Adamopoulos, Zhidao Xia, Yu Sin Lau, Nicholas A Athanasou (2006)  Hepatocyte growth factor can substitute for M-CSF to support osteoclastogenesis.   Biochem Biophys Res Commun 350: 2. 478-483 Nov  
Abstract: Osteopetrotic mice lacking functional macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) recover with ageing, suggesting that alternative osteoclastogenesis pathways exist. Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and M-CSF signal through tyrosine kinase receptors and phosphorylate common transducers and effectors such as Src, Grb2, and PI3-Kinase. HGF is known to play a role in osteoclast formation, and in this study we have determined whether HGF could replace M-CSF to support human osteoclastogenesis. We found that the HGF receptor, c-Met, is expressed by the CD14(+) monocyte fraction of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). HGF was able to support monocyte-osteoclast differentiation in the presence of receptor activator for nuclear factor kappaB ligand as evidenced by the formation of numerous multinucleated tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase and vitronectin receptor positive cells which formed F-actin rings and were capable of lacunar resorption. The addition of a neutralising antibody to M-CSF did not inhibit osteoclast differentiation. HGF is a well-established survival factor and viability assays and live/dead staining showed that it promoted the survival and proliferation of monocytes and osteoclasts in a manner similar to M-CSF. Our findings indicate that HGF can substitute for M-CSF to support human osteoclast formation.
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T J W Matthews, G C Hand, J L Rees, N A Athanasou, A J Carr (2006)  Pathology of the torn rotator cuff tendon. Reduction in potential for repair as tear size increases.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 88: 4. 489-495 Apr  
Abstract: We have studied cellular and vascular changes in different stages of full thickness tears of the rotator cuff. We examined biopsies from the supraspinatus tendon in 40 patients with chronic rotator cuff tears who were undergoing surgery and compared them with biopsies from four uninjured subscapularis tendons. Morphological and immunocytochemical methods using monoclonal antibodies directed against leucocytes, macrophages, mast cells, proliferative and vascular markers were used. Histological changes indicative of repair and inflammation were most evident in small sized rotator cuff tears with increased fibroblast cellularity and intimal hyperplasia, together with increased expression of leucocyte and vascular markers. These reparative and inflammatory changes diminished as the size of the rotator cuff tear increased. Marked oedema and degeneration was seen in large and massive tears, which more often showed chondroid metaplasia and amyloid deposition. There was no association between the age of the patient and the duration of symptoms. In contrast, large and massive tears showed no increase in the number of inflammatory cells and blood vessels. Small sized rotator cuff tears retained the greatest potential to heal, showing increased fibroblast cellularity, blood vessel proliferation and the presence of a significant inflammatory component. Tissue from large and massive tears is of such a degenerative nature that it may be a significant cause of re-rupture after surgical repair and could make healing improbable in this group.
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Silvia Colucci, Giulia Taraboletti, Luca Primo, Andrea Viale, Cristina Roca, Donatella Valdembri, Massimo Geuna, Marco Pagano, Maria Grano, Anthony M Pogrel, Adrian L Harris, Nicholas N Athanasou, Alberto Mantovani, Alberta Zallone, Federico Bussolino (2006)  Gorham-Stout syndrome: a monocyte-mediated cytokine propelled disease.   J Bone Miner Res 21: 2. 207-218 Feb  
Abstract: We studied the biological features and the immunophenotype of a cell culture established from the lesion of soft tissues of a woman affected by Gorham-Stout syndrome. We found that these cells belonged to a monocytic lineage with some characteristics of immature osteoclasts and were able to release large amounts of osteoclastogenic and angiogenic molecules that may contribute to disease progression.
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S G Sun, Y S Lau, I Itonaga, A Sabokbar, N A Athanasou (2006)  Bone stromal cells in pagetic bone and Paget's sarcoma express RANKL and support human osteoclast formation.   J Pathol 209: 1. 114-120 May  
Abstract: Paget's disease is a focal disorder of bone remodelling, in which there is an increase in osteoclast formation. A rare complication of Paget's disease is the development of a sarcoma, most commonly an osteosarcoma. Osteoclast formation occurs in the presence of macrophage-colony stimulating factor and receptor activator for nuclear factor-kappaB ligand (RANKL), and it has been shown that bone stromal cells in Paget's disease can influence osteoclast formation by modulating the expression of RANKL and its decoy receptor, osteoprotegerin (OPG). In this study we show that pagetic bone stromal cells express RANKL and that these cells promote osteoclast formation by a RANKL-dependent mechanism. Osteoclast formation in co-cultures of monocytes and either pagetic bone stromal cells or Paget's sarcoma stromal cells was not only induced by a contact-dependent mechanism but also occurred via the release of a soluble factor. In contrast to bone stromal cells isolated from normal controls, stromal cells isolated from morphologically normal bone in one patient with Paget's disease also stimulated osteoclast formation in this way; this osteoclastogenesis was inhibited by OPG. Our results indicate that Paget's bone stromal cells support osteoclast formation by a RANKL-dependent process which involves not only cell-cell contact but also secretion of soluble RANKL.
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I E Adamopoulos, A Sabokbar, B P Wordsworth, A Carr, D J Ferguson, N A Athanasou (2006)  Synovial fluid macrophages are capable of osteoclast formation and resorption.   J Pathol 208: 1. 35-43 Jan  
Abstract: To determine whether synovial fluid (SF) macrophages isolated from the SF of osteoarthritis (OA), rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and pyrophosphate arthropathy (PPA) joints are capable of osteoclast formation, and to investigate the cellular and humoral factors required for this to occur, SF macrophages (CD14+) were isolated from the knee joint SF from patients with OA, RA and PPA and cultured for up to 14 days with macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) and soluble receptor activator for nuclear factor-kappaB ligand (RANKL) or tumour-necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) and interleukin-1alpha (IL-1alpha). Osteoclast differentiation was assessed by expression of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) and vitronectin receptor (VNR), F-actin ring formation and lacunar resorption. Osteoclast formation and lacunar resorption was seen in RANKL-treated cultures of SF macrophages isolated from OA, RA and PPA joints with the largest amount of resorption noted in RA and PPA SF macrophage cultures. In TNFalpha/IL-1alpha-treated RA and PPA SF macrophage cultures, osteoclasts capable of lacunar resorption were also formed. Lacunar resorption was more extensive in RANKL than TNFalpha/IL-1alpha-treated cultures. These findings indicate that SF macrophages are capable of differentiating into mature osteoclasts capable of lacunar resorption. M-CSF in combination with RANKL or TNFalpha/IL-1alpha was required for osteoclast formation. As inflammatory synovial fluids contain an increase in the number of macrophages and an increase in the amounts of RANKL, TNFalpha and IL-1alpha, these findings suggest that one means whereby bone erosions may form in rheumatoid or crystal arthritis is by differentiation of synovial fluid macrophages into osteoclasts.
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Iannis E Adamopoulos, Paul B Wordsworth, James R Edwards, David J Ferguson, Nicholas A Athanasou (2006)  Osteoclast differentiation and bone resorption in multicentric reticulohistiocytosis.   Hum Pathol 37: 9. 1176-1185 Sep  
Abstract: Multicentric reticulohistiocytosis (MR) is a systemic disease of unknown cause characterized by the presence of a heavy macrophage infiltrate in skin and synovial tissues and the development of an erosive polyarthritis. The synovial fluid in MR is known to contain numerous mononuclear cells. In this study, we have determined whether these cells contribute to joint destruction in MR by differentiating them into osteoclasts. Synovial fluid mononuclear cells were isolated from the knee joint of a 44-year-old male with MR. These cells were cultured with various combinations of macrophage-colony stimulating factor, receptor activator for nuclear factor kappaB ligand (RANKL), tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin-1alpha, osteoprotegerin, and zoledronate. Osteoclast differentiation was assessed by expression of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase, vitronectin receptor, and the extent of lacunar resorption. Most MR synovial fluid mononuclear cells expressed a macrophage phenotype (CD14(+), CD68(+), HLA-DR(+), CD11b(+)). Extensive osteoclast formation and lacunar resorption were noted in macrophage-colony stimulating factor/RANKL-treated cell cultures. MR synovial fluid contained increased tumor necrosis factor alpha and decreased osteoprotegerin compared with osteoarthritis synovial fluid. Lacunar resorption was inhibited in cultures containing zoledronate. Pamidronate treatment of the patient also reduced the number of synovial fluid macrophages and resulted in less osteoclast formation and lacunar resorption. MR synovial fluid contains numerous macrophages that are capable of differentiating into osteoclasts by the RANKL signaling pathway. Inhibitors of osteoclast formation and resorption activity may be of use in preventing the severe joint destruction that commonly occurs in MR.
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2005
Stephen R Henderson, David Guiliano, Nadege Presneau, Sean McLean, Richard Frow, Sonja Vujovic, John Anderson, Neil Sebire, Jeremy Whelan, Nick Athanasou, Adrienne M Flanagan, Chris Boshoff (2005)  A molecular map of mesenchymal tumors.   Genome Biol 6: 9. 08  
Abstract: Bone and soft tissue tumors represent a diverse group of neoplasms thought to derive from cells of the mesenchyme or neural crest. Histological diagnosis is challenging due to the poor or heterogenous differentiation of many tumors, resulting in uncertainty over prognosis and appropriate therapy.
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C P Little, A L Ruiz, I J Harding, P McLardy-Smith, R Gundle, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (2005)  Osteonecrosis in retrieved femoral heads after failed resurfacing arthroplasty of the hip.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 87: 3. 320-323 Mar  
Abstract: We present the histological findings of bone retrieved from beneath the femoral components of failed metal-on-metal hip resurfacing arthroplasties. Of a total of 377 patients who underwent resurfacing arthroplasty, 13 required revision; for fracture of the femoral neck in eight, loosening of a component in three and for other reasons in two. None of these cases had shown histological evidence of osteonecrosis in the femoral bone at the time of the initial implantation. Bone from the remnant of the femoral head showed changes of osteonecrosis in all but one case at revision. In two cases of fracture which occurred within a week of implantation, the changes were compatible with early necrosis of the edge of the fracture. In the remaining six fractures, there were changes of established osteonecrosis. In all but one of the non-fracture cases, patchy osteonecrosis was seen. We conclude that histological evidence of osteonecrosis is a common finding in failed resurfaced hips. Given that osteonecrosis is extensive in resurfaced femoral heads which fail by fracture, it is likely to play a role in the causation of these fractures.
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A Loughry, S Fairchild, N Athanasou, J Edwards, F C Hall (2005)  Inflammatory arthritis and dermatitis in thymectomized, CD25+ cell-depleted adult mice.   Rheumatology (Oxford) 44: 3. 299-308 Mar  
Abstract: To investigate the effect of CD25+ or CTLA-4(+) cell depletion on the natural history of collagen-induced and spontaneous arthritis in male DBA1/J mice.
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A Sabokbar, I Itonaga, S G Sun, O Kudo, N A Athanasou (2005)  Arthroplasty membrane-derived fibroblasts directly induce osteoclast formation and osteolysis in aseptic loosening.   J Orthop Res 23: 3. 511-519 May  
Abstract: Both macrophages and fibroblasts are the main cell types found in periprosthetic tissues surrounding failed joint arthroplasties. These fibroblasts are known to express RANKL and to produce TNFalpha, factors which promote osteoclast formation and bone resorption. In this study we have analysed the role that arthroplasty membrane-derived fibroblasts (AFb) play in inducing the generation of bone resorbing osteoclasts.
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J S Wang, J Diaz, A Sabokbar, N Athanasou, F Kjellson, K E Tanner, I D McCarthy, L Lidgren (2005)  In vitro and in vivo biological responses to a novel radiopacifying agent for bone cement.   J R Soc Interface 2: 2. 71-78 Mar  
Abstract: Iodixanol (IDX) and iohexol (IHX) have been investigated as possible radiopacification agents for polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) bone cement, to replace the currently used barium sulphate and zirconia. IDX and IHX are both water-soluble iodine-based contrast media and for the last 20 years have been used extensively in clinical diagnostic procedures such as contrast media enhanced computed tomography, angiography and urography. One of the major reasons to remove the current radiopacifying agents is their well-documented cytotoxicity and their potential to increase bone resorption. Using in vitro bone resorption assays, the effect of PMMA particles plus IDX or IHX to induce osteoclast formation and lacunar resorption on dentine slices has been investigated. These responses have been compared with the in vitro response to PMMA particles containing the conventional radiopacifying agents, that is, barium sulphate and zirconia. In parallel, the in vivo reaction, in terms of new bone formation, to particles of these materials has been tested using a bone harvest chamber in rabbit tibiae. In vitro cell culture showed that PMMA containing IHX resulted in significantly less bone resorption than PMMA containing the conventional opacifiers. In vivo testing, however, showed no significant differences between the amounts of new bone formed around cement samples containing the two iodine-based opacifying agents in particulate form, although both led to fewer inflammatory cells than particles of PMMA containing zirconia. Our results suggest that a non-ionic radiopacifier could be considered as an alternative to the conventional radiopacifying agents used in biomaterials in orthopaedic surgery.
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Yu Sin Lau, Afsaneh Sabokbar, C L M H Gibbons, Henk Giele, Nicholas Athanasou (2005)  Phenotypic and molecular studies of giant-cell tumors of bone and soft tissue.   Hum Pathol 36: 9. 945-954 Sep  
Abstract: Giant-cell tumor of bone (GCTB) and giant-cell tumor of soft tissue (GCTST) are tumors that contain a prominent osteoclastlike giant-cell component. The precise relationship between these morphologically similar tumors is unclear, and the cellular mechanism whereby giant cells accumulate within these and other locally aggressive tumors is uncertain. In this study, we have examined the cytochemical, functional, and molecular phenotype of the mononuclear and multinucleated components of GCTB and GCTST. Giant cells in GCTB and GCTST exhibited an osteoclast phenotype expressing tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase and vitronectin receptor and being capable of lacunar resorption. The mononuclear stromal cells derived from GCTB and GCTST exhibited an osteoblast phenotype, expressing alkaline phosphatase, and the receptor activator for nuclear factor kappaB ligand (RANKL), a factor that is essential for osteoclast formation. These cells also expressed osteoprotegerin (OPG), an inhibitor of osteoclastogenesis, and TRAIL, a receptor that binds OPG. Lacunar resorption by giant cells isolated from GCTB and GCTST was inhibited by OPG, zoledronate, and calcitonin. These findings indicate that the mononuclear and giant-cell components of GCTB and GCTST have similar phenotypic features and that the accumulation of osteoclasts in these giant-cell-rich tumors occurs by a RANKL-dependent process. RANKL expression by osteoblastlike mononuclear stromal cells in these tumors stimulates osteoclast formation and resorption; this would account for the osteolysis associated with these giant-cell-rich tumors. Inhibitors of osteoclast formation and activity are likely to be effective in controlling the osteolysis associated with GCTB and possibly other giant-cell-rich lesions.
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2004
I Itonaga, A Sabokbar, S G Sun, O Kudo, L Danks, D Ferguson, Y Fujikawa, N A Athanasou (2004)  Transforming growth factor-beta induces osteoclast formation in the absence of RANKL.   Bone 34: 1. 57-64 Jan  
Abstract: Transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta) is a multifunctional growth factor that is produced by many cells in bone and is abundant in the bone matrix. TGFbeta is known to regulate RANKL-induced osteoclast formation and bone resorbing activity. In this study we sought to determine whether TGFbeta could directly induce osteoclast formation by a RANKL-independent mechanism. We found that the addition of TGFbeta to cultures of human monocytes and RAW 264.7 cells (in the presence of M-CSF and the absence of RANKL, TNFalpha or IL-6/IL-11) was sufficient to induce the formation of TRAP+ and VNR+ cells, which formed actin rings and were capable of extensive lacunar resorption. The addition of osteoprotegerin or antibodies to TNFalpha and its receptors, as well as antibodies to gp130, did not inhibit lacunar resorption, indicating that TGFbeta did not act by stimulating RANKL, TNF or IL-6 production by monocytes. TGFbeta-induced osteoclast formation was qualitatively different from that induced by RANKL with numerous TRAP+/VNR+ mononuclear and small multinucleated cells being formed; these cells produced many small resorption lacunae. Our results indicate that TGFbeta, which is abundant in the bone matrix, can, in the presence of M-CSF, directly induce mononuclear phagocyte osteoclast precursors to differentiate into osteoclastic cells capable of lacunar resorption.
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Masahiiko Maki, Nicholas Athanasou (2004)  Osteofibrous dysplasia and adamantinoma: correlation of proto-oncogene product and matrix protein expression.   Hum Pathol 35: 1. 69-74 Jan  
Abstract: To investigate the relationship between osteofibrous dysplasia (OFD) and adamantinoma, we analyzed the expression of several proto-oncogene products and extracellular matrix proteins by immunohistochemistry and correlated our results with histological and ultrastructural findings. C-fos and c-jun, but not c-Met, were observed in OFD and in the fibrous and epithelial components of differentiated and classical adamantinomas. Staining for collagen IV, laminin and galectin-3, a laminin binding protein was seen in OFD and around cell nests in adamantinoma. E-, P-, and N-cadherin expression was found in all cases of classical adamantinoma, but not in differentiated adamantinoma or OFD. Osteonectin was detected in both the epithelial and fibrous components of adamantinomas, but osteopontin and osteocalcin were not seen in classical adamantinomas. The results show common expression of a number of oncoproteins and bone matrix proteins in adamantinoma and OFD, some of which are associated with mesenchymal-to-epithelial cell transformation. These findings would be in keeping with the hypothesis that OFD represents a precursor lesion of adamantinoma. Differential expression of a number of bone matrix protein in adamantinoma may also be of diagnostic use in distinguishing these 2 lesions immunohistochemically.
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Sherif Isaac, Nicholas A Athanasou, Michael Pike, Peter D Burge (2004)  Radial nerve palsy owing to localized hypertrophic neuropathy (intraneural perineurioma) in early childhood.   J Child Neurol 19: 1. 71-75 Jan  
Abstract: Localized hypertrophic neuropathy, also termed intraneural perineurioma, is a rare disorder of unknown etiology that produces a slowly progressive painless focal lesion of a peripheral nerve. It is characterized histologically by concentric whorls ("onion bulbs") of epithelial membrane antigen-reactive, S-100 protein-negative perineurial cells surrounding nerve fibers. We report a radial nerve palsy in a child aged 2 years in whom the diagnosis of localized hypertrophic neuropathy was made by biopsy. Resection of the affected nerve segment and sural nerve grafting produced no useful recovery after 3 years, probably because of the long duration of denervation. When this mononeuropathy presents in early childhood, uncertainty over the time of onset can lead to difficulty in distinguishing this potentially treatable lesion from congenital and other causes of nerve palsy.
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H C Blair, N A Athanasou (2004)  Recent advances in osteoclast biology and pathological bone resorption.   Histol Histopathol 19: 1. 189-199 Jan  
Abstract: The osteoclast is a bone-degrading polykaryon. Recent studies have clarified the differentiation of this cell and the biochemical mechanisms it uses to resorb bone. The osteoclast derives from a monocyte/macrophage precursor. Osteoclast formation requires permissive concentrations of M-CSF and is driven by contact with mesenchymal cells in bone that bear the TNF-family ligand RANKL. Osteoclast precursors express RANK, and the interaction between RANKL and RANK (which is inhibited by OPG) is the major determinant of osteoclast formation. Hormones, such as PTH/PTHrP, glucocorticoids and 1,25(OH)2D3, and humoral factors, including TNFalpha, interleukin-1, TGFss and prostaglandins, influence osteoclast formation by altering expression of these molecular factors. TNFalpha, IL-6 and IL-11 have also been shown to promote osteoclast formation by RANKL-independent processes. RANKL-dependent/independent osteoclast formation is likely to play an important role in conditions where there is pathological bone resorption such as inflammatory arthritis and malignant bone resorption. Osteoclast functional defects cause sclerotic bone disorders, many of which have recently been identified as specific genetic defects. Osteoclasts express specialized proteins including a vacuolar-type H+-ATPase that drives HCl secretion for dissolution of bone mineral. One v-ATPase component, the 116 kD V0 subunit, has several isoforms. Only one isoform, TCIRG1, is up-regulated in osteoclasts. Defects in TCIRG1 are common causes of osteopetrosis. HCl secretion is dependent on chloride channels; a chloride channel homologue, CLCN7, is another common defect in osteopetrosis. Humans who are deficient in carbonic anhydrase II or who have defects in phagocytosis also have variable defects in bone remodelling. Organic bone matrix is degraded by thiol proteinases, principally cathepsin K, and abnormalities in cathepsin K cause another sclerotic bone disorder, pycnodysostosis. Thus, bone turnover in normal subjects depends on relative expression of key cytokines, and defects in osteoclastic turnover usually reflect defects in specific ion transporters or enzymes that play essential roles in bone degradation.
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D J P Ferguson, I Itonaga, M Maki, E McNally, R Gundle, N A Athanasou (2004)  Heterotopic bone formation following hip arthroplasty in Paget's disease.   Bone 34: 6. 1078-1083 Jun  
Abstract: Heterotopic bone formation in soft tissues occurs commonly in Paget's disease patients following a primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). The nature of this heterotopic bone has not been documented. In this report, we show that the heterotopic bone removed 14 years after primary THA in a case of Paget's disease was sclerotic, contained prominent mosaic cement lines and showed increased remodelling activity on the bone surface. In addition to these typically Pagetic histological features, it was noted ultrastructurally that the osteoclasts contained characteristic intranuclear viral-like inclusions. In contrast, the foreign body macrophages found in the joint pseudocapsule and pseudomembrane, which are a population of mononuclear precursor cells from which osteoclasts can be formed, did not contain viral-like inclusions. These findings are of interest regarding the pathogenesis of heterotopic bone formation following hip arthroplasty and the ontogeny of Pagetic osteoclasts.
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H Xu, J R Edwards, O Espinosa, S Banerji, D G Jackson, N A Athanasou (2004)  Expression of a lymphatic endothelial cell marker in benign and malignant vascular tumors.   Hum Pathol 35: 7. 857-861 Jul  
Abstract: Tumors of endothelial cell origin are relatively common. Soft tissue tumors and numerous subtypes of benign and malignant vascular tumors have been described; the histogenesis of many of these tumors is uncertain, and distinguishing between benign and malignant vascular tumors, some of which express lymphatic endothelial cell markers, can be problematic. In the present study, immunophenotypic expression of a novel hyaluronan receptor (LYVE-1), which is expressed by endothelial cells of normal lymphatic vessels but not blood vessels, was determined in benign and malignant vascular tumors. It was found that, except in lymphangiomas, intramuscular hemangiomas, and Masson's hemangiomas, endothelial cells in benign blood vessel tumors (including capillary and cavernous hemangiomas, glomus tumors, pyogenic granulomas, and epithelioid hemangiomas) were negative for LYVE-1, and that all angiosarcomas and Kaposi's sarcomas were positive for LYVE-1. Expression of LYVE-1 and other lymphatic endothelial cell markers in relatively few vascular neoplasms has implications for the histogenesis of these lesions, and may prove useful in distinguishing angiosarcoma and Kaposi's sarcoma from most common benign vascular tumors.
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Jonathan M F Spencer, C L Maxime H Gibbons, Robert J Sharp, Andrew J Carr, Nicholas A Athanasou (2004)  Arthroplasty for ochronotic arthritis: no failure of 11 replacements in 3 patients followed 6-12 years.   Acta Orthop Scand 75: 3. 355-358 Jun  
Abstract: Alkaptonuria is a rare single-gene disorder characterized by black pigmentation of cartilage and other connective tissues. Premature degenerative arthritis affects the large joints in many of these of patients. Medical treatment is limited to a protein-restricted diet (phenylalanine and tyrosine) with surgery reserved for end-stage joint disease. As in other metabolic bone diseases, there are concerns about the quality and strength of affected bones and therefore the suitability and longevity of replacement arthroplasty. The histopathology and outcome of joint replacement for alkaptonuric arthritis is unknown and limited to sporadic case reports.
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2003
M Petra, J Diaz, P McLardy-Smith, D Murray, R Gundle, N A Athanasou (2003)  A correlative study of clinical and histological findings of revision hip arthroplasty for rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory joint disease.   Scand J Rheumatol 32: 5. 281-286  
Abstract: Primary hip arthroplasty in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and other forms of inflammatory joint disease (IJD) is generally thought to be associated with a less favourable outcome in terms of implant survival and other complications. Whether the duration of implant survival correlates with the degree of rheumatoid-like inflammatory changes in periprosthetic tissues is uncertain.
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A Sabokbar, R Pandey, N A Athanasou (2003)  The effect of particle size and electrical charge on macrophage-osteoclast differentiation and bone resorption.   J Mater Sci Mater Med 14: 9. 731-738 Sep  
Abstract: In aseptic loosening, there is commonly periprosthetic bone loss and a heavy macrophage infiltrate in response to biomaterial wear particles generated from the implant materials. Macrophages which have phagocytosed wear particles are known to be capable of differentiation into bone resorbing osteoclasts. In this investigation we determine the role of particle size and particle charge on this process. Mouse monocytes and macrophages were co-cultured with osteoblast-like UMR106 cells and 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 in the presence or the absence of (i) various sizes of latex beads (0.1, 1, 10 and 100 microm) and (ii) uncharged, positively- or negatively-charged sephadex beads of uniform shape and composition. The extent of osteoclast differentiation by monocytes or foreign body macrophages was determined by the expression of the osteoclast-associated enzyme tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase and lacunar bone resorption. No significant difference in the extent of osteoclast formation and bone resorption was noted in response to particle size. Osteoclast formation was also not significantly different in the presence of positively/negatively charged and uncharged particles. These findings indicate that osteoclast formation is not significantly influenced by particle characteristics, such as particle size. They also add support to the hypothesis that macrophage involvement in periprosthetic osteolysis is not dependent on particle phagocytosis and that it may be induced by particle contact.
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H Xu, J Edwards, S Banerji, R Prevo, D G Jackson, N A Athanasou (2003)  Distribution of lymphatic vessels in normal and arthritic human synovial tissues.   Ann Rheum Dis 62: 12. 1227-1229 Dec  
Abstract: To investigate the distribution of lymphatic vessels in normal, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and osteoarthritis (OA) synovium.
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A Sabokbar, O Kudo, N A Athanasou (2003)  Two distinct cellular mechanisms of osteoclast formation and bone resorption in periprosthetic osteolysis.   J Orthop Res 21: 1. 73-80 Jan  
Abstract: TNFalpha and IL-1alpha are proinflammatory cytokines that are abundant in periprosthetic tissues. These cytokines stimulate bone resorption and have recently been shown to directly induce osteoclast formation in mouse marrow cultures. We examined whether TNFalpha and IL-1alpha can directly induce osteoclast formation from human arthroplasty-derived (CD14(+)) macrophages by a mechanism independent of RANKL-induced osteoclastogenesis.
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H Giele, K Hollowood, C L M H Gibbons, D J Wilson, N A Athanasou (2003)  Subungual melanoma with osteocartilaginous differentiation.   Skeletal Radiol 32: 12. 724-727 Dec  
Abstract: Osteocartilaginous metaplasia is known to occur rarely in melanomas, particularly in subungual melanomas. We present a case of a calcified subungual soft tissue tumour in which biopsy of the lesion showed malignant round and spindle-shaped tumour cells, many of which were associated with the formation of cartilage and osteoid-like material. Subsequent resection showed clear histological evidence of a subungual melanoma. Tumour cells expressed S100, melan-A and neurone-specific enolase but were negative for HMB45. Diagnostic radiological and histological features and the nature of the osteocartilaginous differentiation within this lesion is discussed.
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C L M H Gibbons, M Petra, R Smith, N A Athanasou (2003)  Bisphosphonate treatment of benign multifocal and unifocal osteolytic tumours of bone.   Sarcoma 7: 1. 35-41  
Abstract: Growth of benign tumours and tumour-like lesions of bone results in osteolysis which may cause pathological fracture. Bisphosphonates are anti-osteolytic agents which have proved effective in the treatment of number of osteolytic conditions. In this study we report the results of treatment with the aminobisphosphonate, pamidronate, of three benign osteolytic tumours of bone, two cases of fibrous dysplasia and one of Langerhans cell histiocytosis. In all three cases there was clinical and radiological improvement following treatment. Radiologically, bone lesions did not exhibit progressive enlargement. Two cases of fibrous dysplasia also showed features suggestive of increased bone formation. These findings indicate that bisphosphonates are likely to be useful in controlling the osteolysis of benign tumours/tumour-like lesions of bone, particularly in those cases where surgical intervention is not possible or multifocal lesions are present.
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O Kudo, A Sabokbar, A Pocock, I Itonaga, Y Fujikawa, N A Athanasou (2003)  Interleukin-6 and interleukin-11 support human osteoclast formation by a RANKL-independent mechanism.   Bone 32: 1. 1-7 Jan  
Abstract: Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and interleukin-11 (IL-11) are known to influence osteoclast formation and bone resorption. In order to determine whether IL-6 and IL-11 could independently support human osteoclast formation, these factors were added to cultures of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells of the monocyte (CD14(+)) fraction in the presence of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF). Under these conditions, IL-6 and IL-11 induced the formation of multinucleated cells which were positive for TRAP, VNR, and calcitonin receptor and capable of lacunar resorption. Osteoclastogenesis induced by IL-6 and IL-11 was inhibited by the addition of an anti-gp130 antibody but not by osteoprotegerin. These results indicate that IL-6 and IL-11, which are thought to play a role in several osteolytic bone disorders, are directly capable of inducing osteoclast formation by a RANKL-independent mechanism.
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I Itonaga, I Hussein, O Kudo, A Sabokbar, S Watt-Smith, D Ferguson, N A Athanasou (2003)  Cellular mechanisms of osteoclast formation and lacunar resorption in giant cell granuloma of the jaw.   J Oral Pathol Med 32: 4. 224-231 Apr  
Abstract: Giant cell granuloma (GCG) is an osteolytic tumour of the jaw which is characterised by the presence of both mononuclear and multinucleated (osteoclast-like) giant cell components. The nature of these component cells and the pathogenesis of the extensive osteolysis associated with this lesion is uncertain.
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2002
S D Neale, E Schulze, R Smith, N A Athanasou (2002)  The influence of serum cytokines and growth factors on osteoclast formation in Paget's disease.   QJM 95: 4. 233-240 Apr  
Abstract: Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells (MNCs) that form from circulating mononuclear precursors in the presence of the receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B-ligand (RANKL) and macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF).
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A E Timms, R Sathananthan, L Bradbury, N A Athanasou, B P Wordsworth, M A Brown (2002)  Genetic testing for haemochromatosis in patients with chondrocalcinosis.   Ann Rheum Dis 61: 8. 745-747 Aug  
Abstract: Hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) is the most common lethal monogenic human disease, affecting roughly 1 in 300 white northern Europeans. Homozygosity for the C282Y polymorphism within the HFE gene causes more than 80% of cases, with compound heterozygosity of the C282Y and H63D polymorphism also increasing susceptibility to disease. The aim of this study was to determine the frequency of the C282Y and H63D polymorphisms in the disease, and to assess the risk of HH in heterozygotes for the C282Y polymorphism. 128 patients were recruited because of either radiographic chondrocalcinosis (at least bicompartmental knee disease or joints other than the knee involved) or CPPD pseudogout. Genotyping of the HFE C282Y and H63D mutations was performed using PCR/SSP and genotypes for the C282Y polymorphism confirmed by PCR/RFLP. Historical white European control data were used for comparison. Two previously undiagnosed C282Y homozygotes (1.6%), and 16 C282Y heterozygotes (12.5%), including four (3.1%) C282Y/H63D compound heterozygotes were identified. This represents a significant overrepresentation of C282Y homozygotes (relative risk 3.4, p=0.037), but the number of heterozygotes was not significantly increased. At a cost per test of pound1 for each subject, screening all patients with chondrocalcinosis using the above ascertainment criteria costs only pound64 for each case of haemochromatosis identified, clearly a highly cost effective test given the early mortality associated with untreated haemochromatosis. Routine screening for haemochromatosis in patients with appreciable chondrocalcinosis is recommended.
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I Itonaga, E Schulze, P D Burge, C L M H Gibbons, D Ferguson, N A Athanasou (2002)  Phenotypic characterization of mononuclear and multinucleated cells of giant cell reparative granuloma of small bones.   J Pathol 198: 1. 30-36 Sep  
Abstract: Four cases of giant cell reparative granuloma (GCRG) of small bones were analysed in order to determine the pathogenesis of the lesion and the nature of the component mononuclear and multinucleated cells. In cell cultures, giant cells formed a non-proliferating homogeneous population which expressed features characteristic of the osteoclast phenotype, including leucocyte common antigen, CD68, vitronectin receptor, and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase. The giant cells were capable of lacunar resorption and their activity was inhibited by calcitonin. In addition to numerous macrophage-like cells, some of which expressed osteoclast phenotypic characteristics, there were also mononuclear stromal cells which proliferated in culture and were alkaline phosphatase-positive; these cells expressed receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand (RANKL) and were capable of supporting human osteoclast formation from circulating precursors in vitro. These findings suggest that the osteoclast-like giant cells in GCRG of small bones are formed from monocyte/macrophage-like osteoclast precursors which differentiate into osteoclasts under the influence of mononuclear osteoblast-like stromal cells.
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M Jevon, A Sabokbar, Y Fujikawa, T Hirayama, S D Neale, J Wass, N A Athanasou (2002)  Gender- and age-related differences in osteoclast formation from circulating precursors.   J Endocrinol 172: 3. 673-681 Mar  
Abstract: A number of bone diseases characterised by excessive osteolysis (e.g. osteoporosis and Paget's disease) exhibit a marked gender difference in prevalence and are more common in the elderly population. Bone resorption is carried out by osteoclasts, which are formed by fusion of circulating mononuclear precursor cells of haematopoietic origin. In this study, we have determined whether there are gender- and age-related differences in osteoclast formation from circulating precursors. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were co-cultured with UMR106 osteoblast-like cells in the presence of macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) and 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D(3) (1,25(OH)(2)D(3)) or cultured alone in the presence of sRANKL (soluble receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa B ligand) and M-CSF. As assessed by the formation of tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP)-positive (TRAP(+)) and vitronectin receptor-positive (VNR(+)) multinucleated cells (MNCs), there was no difference in the number of circulating osteoclast precursors in males and females. Lacunar resorption carried out by osteoclasts formed from these precursors was generally increased in males compared with females (P=0.03). An increase in the number of TRAP(+) and VNR(+) MNCs formed from male PBMCs was noted in response to 1,25(OH)(2)D(3) (P<0.005). An increase in lacunar resorption in cultures of PBMCs (10(5) per well) from males was also noted in response to 10(-9) M 1,25(OH)(2)D(3) (P<0.05) and sRANKL (P=0.05), but not M-CSF. The addition of dexamethasone resulted in a marked increase in osteoclast formation and lacunar resorption in both males and females. Post-menopausal females and males of comparable age showed similar levels of osteoclastogenesis. Pre-menopausal women showed similar levels of osteoclastogenesis but less resorption (P=0.01) compared with males of comparable age. These results show that there are specific gender/age-related differences in osteoclast formation and bone resorption and have implications for evaluating osteoclastogenesis in skeletal diseases such as primary osteoporosis and Paget's disease.
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A H R W Simpson, M K Wood, N A Athanasou (2002)  Histological assessment of the presence or absence of infection in fracture non-union.   Injury 33: 2. 151-155 Mar  
Abstract: Infection is a major cause of non-unions. Infection is not always evident clinically, nor on bacteriological analysis. If it is untreated, non-union treatment may fail.
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Osami Kudo, Yosuke Fujikawa, Ichiro Itonaga, Afsie Sabokbar, Takehiko Torisu, Nicholas A Athanasou (2002)  Proinflammatory cytokine (TNFalpha/IL-1alpha) induction of human osteoclast formation.   J Pathol 198: 2. 220-227 Oct  
Abstract: TNFalpha and IL-1alpha are potent stimulators of bone resorption in vivo and in vitro. Recently, it has been demonstrated that these two cytokines directly induce osteoclastogenesis in mouse marrow cultures. This study determined whether TNFalpha (+/- IL-1alpha) is also capable of inducing human osteoclastogenesis. The CD14(+) monocyte fraction of human peripheral mononuclear cells was cultured with TNFalpha +/- IL-1alpha in the presence of M-CSF. TNFalpha induced the formation of multinucleated cells (MNCs) which were positive for TRAP, VNR and cathepsin K and showed evidence of resorption pit formation. IL-1alpha stimulated TNFalpha-induced lacunar resorption two- to four-fold. Osteoprotegerin, the decoy receptor for RANKL, did not inhibit this process. Anti-human IL-1alpha neutralizing antibodies significantly inhibited resorption without inhibiting the formation of TRAP(+)/VNR(+) MNCs. These results suggest that, in the presence of M-CSF, TNFalpha is sufficient for inducing human osteoclast differentiation from circulating precursors by a process which is distinct from the RANK/RANKL signalling pathway.
Notes:
T Hirayama, L Danks, A Sabokbar, N A Athanasou (2002)  Osteoclast formation and activity in the pathogenesis of osteoporosis in rheumatoid arthritis.   Rheumatology (Oxford) 41: 11. 1232-1239 Nov  
Abstract: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is often complicated by generalized osteopenia due to increased bone resorption by osteoclasts. We analysed a number of cellular and humoral factors that influence osteoclast formation from circulating precursors in RA patients.
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T Hirayama, A Sabokbar, N A Athanasou (2002)  Effect of corticosteroids on human osteoclast formation and activity.   J Endocrinol 175: 1. 155-163 Oct  
Abstract: Chronic corticosteroid treatment is known to induce bone loss and osteoporosis. Osteoclasts are specialised bone-resorbing cells that are formed from mononuclear phagocyte precursors that circulate in the monocyte fraction. In this study we have examined the effect of the synthetic glucocorticoid, dexamethasone, on human osteoclast formation and bone-resorbing activity. Human monocytes were cultured for up to 21 days on glass coverslips and dentine slices, with soluble receptor activator for nuclear factor kappaB ligand (RANKL; 30 ng/ml) and human macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF; 25 ng/ml) in the presence and absence of dexamethasone (10(-8) M). The addition of dexamethasone over a period of 7 and 14 days of culture of monocytes (during which cell proliferation and differentiation predominantly occurred) resulted in a marked increase in the formation of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase-positive multinucleated cells and an increase in lacunar resorption. The addition of dexamethasone to monocyte cultures after 14 days (when resorptive activity of osteoclasts had commenced) reduced the extent of lacunar resorption compared with cultures to which no dexamethasone had been added. The addition of dexamethasone to osteoclasts isolated from giant cell tumours of bone significantly inhibited resorption pit formation. Our findings indicate that dexamethasone has a direct effect on osteoclast formation and activity, stimulating the proliferation and differentiation of human osteoclast precursors and inhibiting the bone-resorbing activity of mature osteoclasts.
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C L M H Gibbons, H A Khwaja, A S Cole, P H Cooke, N A Athanasou (2002)  Giant-cell tumour of the tendon sheath in the foot and ankle.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 84: 7. 1000-1003 Sep  
Abstract: Giant-cell tumour of the tendon sheath (GCT-TS) is a benign solitary tumour which usually arises in the limbs. It occurs most often in the hand where local recurrence after excision has been reported in up to 45% of cases. It is less common in the foot where the biological behaviour and risk of local recurrence have not been defined. We have studied 17 cases of GCT-TS of the foot and ankle in which treatment was by excision. Fifteen presented as a solitary, painless, slow-growing soft-tissue swelling. One lesion was associated with sensory deficit of a digital nerve and one with pain on walking. Thirteen cases originated from the periarticular tendon-sheath complex of the small joints of the toes and four from the capsule or long tendons of the ankle. A correct preoperative diagnosis was made in only three cases. MRI proved to be the most useful preoperative investigation as GCT-TS has a characteristic appearance which allows planned local excision to be carried out. None of the patients with histologically confirmed GCT-TS required further surgery. There was no local recurrence in 15 patients who were available for follow-up at a mean of 85 months.
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O Kudo, A Sabokbar, A Pocock, I Itonaga, N A Athanasou (2002)  Isolation of human osteoclasts formed in vitro: hormonal effects on the bone-resorbing activity of human osteoclasts.   Calcif Tissue Int 71: 6. 539-546 Dec  
Abstract: Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells that carry out bone resorption. Analysis of the direct effect of hormones on the bone-resorbing activity of human osteoclasts has been limited by difficulties in isolating these cells from the human skeleton. In this study, human osteoclasts formed from cultures of peripheral blood mononuclear precursors (PBMCs) on a Type-I collagen gel were isolated by collagenase treatment for investigating their resorptive activity. PBMCs were cultured in the presence of M-CSF, soluble RANKL, dexamethasone, and 1,25(OH)2D3. The isolated multinucleated cells expressed the osteoclast markers, TRAP, VNR, cathepsin K, calcitonin receptors and were capable of extensive lacunar resorption. Calcitonin inhibited the motility and resorptive activity of osteoclasts. RANKL significantly stimulated osteoclast resorption, but 1,25(OH)2D3, PTH, and OPG did not. These findings indicate that calcitonin and RANKL act directly on human osteoclasts to inhibit and stimulate osteoclast bone-resorbing activity, respectively, and that PTH, 1,25(OH)2D3, and OPG are more likely to influence osteoclast activity indirectly. This technique of human osteoclast isolation should permit the effects of cellular and hormonal/humoral factors on the bone-resorbing activity of mature human osteoclasts to be assessed independently of any effect such factors have on osteoclast formation. It should also make it possible to examine directly the resorptive activity and other characteristics of osteoclasts in specific bone disorders such as Paget's disease.
Notes:
L Danks, A Sabokbar, R Gundle, N A Athanasou (2002)  Synovial macrophage-osteoclast differentiation in inflammatory arthritis.   Ann Rheum Dis 61: 10. 916-921 Oct  
Abstract: Pathological bone resorption (marginal erosions and juxta-articular osteoporosis) by osteoclasts commonly occurs in rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
Notes:
T T Yang, A Sabokbar, C L M H Gibbons, N A Athanasou (2002)  Human mesenchymal tumour-associated macrophages differentiate into osteoclastic bone-resorbing cells.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 84: 3. 452-456 Apr  
Abstract: The cellular mechanisms which account for the formation of osteoclasts and bone resorption associated with enlarging benign and malignant mesenchymal tumours of bone are uncertain. Osteoclasts are marrow-derived, multinucleated, bone-resorbing cells which express a macrophage phenotype. We have determined whether tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) isolated from benign and malignant mesenchymal tumours are capable of differentiating into osteoclasts. Macrophages were cultured on both coverslips and dentine slices for up to 21 days with UMR 106 osteoblastic cells in the presence of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3) and human macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) or, in the absence of UMR 106 cells, with M-CSF and RANK ligand. In all tumours, the formation of osteoclasts from CD14-positive macrophages was shown by the formation of tartrate-resistant-acid-phosphatase and vitronectin-receptor-positive multinucleated cells which were capable of carrying out lacunar resorption. These results indicate that the tumour osteolysis associated with the growth of mesenchymal tumours in bone is likely to be due in part to the differentiation of mononuclear phagocyte osteoclast precursors which are present in the TAM population of these lesions.
Notes:
M Petra, C L M H Gibbons, N A Athanasou (2002)  Leiomyosarcoma of bone arising in association with a bone infarct.   Sarcoma 6: 1. 47-50  
Abstract: Both primary leiomyosarcoma of bone and sarcoma arising in association with a bone infarct are rare events. In this case report we describe for the first time a case of leiomyosarcoma arising in a bone infarct. The tumour arose in a medullary infarct in the proximal femur of an elderly patient. As in other cases of sarcoma arising in a bone infarct, the prognosis was poor, the patient dying within 6 months of diagnosis.
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2001
A S Cole, S Cordiner-Lawrie, A J Carr, N A Athanasou (2001)  Localised deposition of amyloid in tears of the rotator cuff.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 83: 4. 561-564 May  
Abstract: Age-related localised deposition of amyloid in connective tissue has been found in degenerative articular and periarticular tissue. Biopsies of the supraspinatus tendon of 28 patients undergoing repair of the rotator cuff were analysed histologically for the presence of localised deposition of amyloid. There was a long history of impingement in 20 patients, and eight patients had suffered an acute traumatic tear with no preceding symptoms. Localised deposition of amyloid identified by Congo Red staining was detected in 16 samples (57%). Amyloid was present in 14 (70%) of the degenerative tears, but in only two (25%) of the acute tears. Immunohistochemical staining showed that the amyloid deposits were positive for P component, but negative for kappa and lambda light chains, prealbumin, and beta2 microglobulin. Critical electrolyte staining revealed highly-sulphated glycosaminoglycans at sites of deposition of amyloid. The presence of localised deposition of amyloid in tears of the rotator cuff is likely to represent irreversible structural changes. These findings support the theory that impingement and tears are due to intrinsic degenerative changes within the tendons of the rotator cuff.
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A Sabokbar, R Pandey, J Díaz, J M Quinn, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (2001)  Hydroxyapatite particles are capable of inducing osteoclast formation.   J Mater Sci Mater Med 12: 8. 659-664 Aug  
Abstract: Hydroxyapatite (HA) coatings have been used to improve implant fixation by promoting bone formation around the prosthesis. A macrophage response to HA particulates has been noted around loosened HA-coated prostheses. As biomaterial wear particle-associated macrophages are known to be capable of differentiating into osteoclasts that are capable of bone resorption, we examined whether particulate HA could similarly induce macrophage-osteoclast differentiation. HA-associated macrophages were isolated from granulomas, formed by subcutaneous implantation of HA, and co-cultured with UMR 106 osteoblast-like cells in the presence of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) for up to 14 days on glass coverslips and bone slices. HA-associated macrophage-osteoclast differentiation was evidenced by the formation of numerous multinucleated tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP)-positive cells which formed lacunar resorption pits on bone slices. Polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) particle-associated macrophages, isolated from subcutaneous PMMA-containing granulomas, caused significantly more osteoclast formation and bone resorption than HA-associated macrophages. These results indicate that macrophages responding to HA particles are capable of osteoclast differentiation. They also suggest that particles derived from uncemented (HA-coated) implants are likely to induce less osteoclast formation and osteolysis than cemented implants.
Notes:
N C Hunt, Y Fujikawa, A Sabokbar, I Itonaga, A Harris, N A Athanasou (2001)  Cellular mechanisms of bone resorption in breast carcinoma.   Br J Cancer 85: 1. 78-84 Jul  
Abstract: The cellular mechanisms that account for the increase in osteoclast numbers and bone resorption in skeletal breast cancer metastasis are unclear. Osteoclasts are marrow-derived cells which form by fusion of mononuclear phagocyte precursors that circulate in the monocyte fraction. In this study we have determined whether circulating osteoclast precursors are increased in number or have an increased sensitivity to humoral factors for osteoclastogenesis in breast cancer patients with skeletal metastases (+/- hypercalcaemia) compared to patients with primary breast cancer and age-matched normal controls. Monocytes were isolated and cocultured with UMR 106 osteoblastic cells in the presence of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3[1,25(OH)2D3] and human macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) on coverslips and dentine slices. Limiting dilution experiments showed that there was no increase in the number of circulating osteoclast precursors in breast cancer patients with skeletal metastases (+/- hypercalcaemia) compared to controls. Osteoclast precursors in these patients also did not exhibit increased sensitivity to 1,25(OH)2D3or M-CSF in terms of osteoclast formation. The addition of parathyroid hormone-related protein and interleukin-6 did not increase osteoclast formation. The addition of the supernatant of cultured breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-435), however, significantly increased monocyte-osteoclast formation in a dose-dependent fashion. These results indicate that the increase in osteoclast formation in breast cancer is not due to an increase in the number/nature of circulating osteoclast precursors. They also suggest that tumour cells promote osteoclast formation in the bone microenvironment by secreting soluble osteoclastogenic factor(s).
Notes:
Y Fujikawa, A Sabokbar, S D Neale, I Itonaga, T Torisu, N A Athanasou (2001)  The effect of macrophage-colony stimulating factor and other humoral factors (interleukin-1, -3, -6, and -11, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor) on human osteoclast formation from circulating cells.   Bone 28: 3. 261-267 Mar  
Abstract: Macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) is an essential requirement for human osteoclast formation, but its effect on the proliferation and differentiation of circulating osteoclast precursor cells is unknown. Other growth factors and cytokines are also known to support/stimulate osteoclast formation from mouse marrow precursors, but it is not certain whether these factors similarly influence human osteoclast formation. In this study, human monocytes were cocultured with osteoblast-like UMR-106 cells on coverslips and dentine slices for up to 21 days in the presence of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D(3) (10(-7) mol/L), dexamethasone (10(-8) mol/L), and various concentrations of either M-CSF or other humoral factors (interleukin [IL]-1beta, IL-3, IL-6, and IL-11; tumor necrosis factor-alpha [TNF-alpha]; and granulocyte macrophage [GM]-CSF). The effect on osteoclast formation was assessed by tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) and vitronectin receptor staining and lacunar bone resorption. The results of time-course and proliferation studies showed that M-CSF stimulated both the proliferative and differentiation stages of human osteoclast formation from circulating osteoclast precursors in a dose-dependent manner. A high concentration of M-CSF (100 ng/mL) did not inhibit osteoclast formation. IL-3 and GM-CSF were also capable of stimulating human osteoclast formation, although these growth factors were much less potent than M-CSF. IL-3- and GM-CSF-stimulated osteoclast formation was inhibited by an antibody specific for human M-CSF. Osteoclast formation and lacunar resorption was not seen when either TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, IL-6 (+ soluble IL-6 receptor), or IL-11 was substituted for M-CSF during coculture. These results confirm that M-CSF is essential for human osteoclast formation from circulating mononuclear precursors, and also shows that IL-3 and GM-CSF may support osteoclast differentiation via the stimulation of M-CSF production by human monocytes.
Notes:
S Cordiner-Lawrie, J Diaz, P Burge, N A Athanasou (2001)  Localized amyloid deposition in trigger finger.   J Hand Surg Br 26: 4. 380-383 Aug  
Abstract: Trigger finger is due to degeneration and thickening of the proximal portion (A1 pulley) of the flexor tendon sheath, which causes constriction of the flexor tendon. This study reports the presence of localized amyloid deposition in the tendon sheath of 11 of 47 cases (23%) of idiopathic primary trigger finger. Amyloid deposits were only found in patients aged over 46 years old and were present around cells and at sites of mucinous and fibrinoid degeneration which contained highly sulphated glycosaminoglycans. The pathogenic significance of these deposits is uncertain but their small size and presence only in middle-aged and elderly adults suggests that they represent a form of age-associated amyloid deposition.
Notes:
T Hirayama, A Sabokbar, I Itonaga, S Watt-Smith, N A Athanasou (2001)  Cellular and humoral mechanisms of osteoclast formation and bone resorption in Gorham-Stout disease.   J Pathol 195: 5. 624-630 Dec  
Abstract: Gorham-Stout disease (GSD) is a rare, massively osteolytic condition which is associated with increased vascularity and an increase in osteoclast numbers. To determine the cellular and humoral mechanisms underlying the increase in osteoclast numbers and osteolysis in GSD, this study analysed circulating osteoclast precursor numbers and sensitivity to osteoclastogenic factors in a GSD patient and age/sex-matched controls. Monocytes were cultured with M-CSF (25 ng/ml) and RANKL (30 ng/ml) and osteoclast formation was assessed in terms of the formation of TRAP(+) and VNR(+) multinucleated cells and the extent of lacunar resorption. There was no increase in the proportion of circulating osteoclast precursors in GSD relative to controls, but lacunar resorption was consistently greater in GSD monocyte cultures. Increased osteoclast formation in GSD was noted when monocytes were incubated with IL-1beta (1 ng/ml), IL-6/sIL-6R (100 ng/ml), and TNFalpha (10 ng/ml). An increase in osteoclast differentiation and bone resorption was also noted in control monocyte cultures in the presence of GSD serum. These results indicate that the increase in osteoclast formation in GSD is due not to an increase in the number of circulating osteoclast precursors, but rather to an increase in the sensitivity of these precursors to humoral factors which promote osteoclast formation and bone resorption.
Notes:
T T Yang, A C Reed, N A Athanasou (2001)  AP2 protein expression as a diagnostic marker in soft tissue tumours.   Sarcoma 5: 3. 139-142  
Abstract: Purpose/Methods: The aP2 gene product (aP2 protein) is known to be expressed by preadipocytes and other immature fat cells in vitro. A mouse monoclonal antibody raised against an 18 amino acid segment of the aP2 protein was found to react with lipoblasts and fetal fat cells in paraffin sections of soft tissue tumours of adipose differentiation. In this immunohistochemical study, we have further examined the diagnostic utility of aP2 expression in distinguishing tumours of adipose differentiation from other benign and malignant soft tissue tumours.Result and discussion aP2 was strongly expressed by lipoblasts in lipoblastomas and all types of liposarcoma as well as brown fat cells in hibernomas. Optimal conditions for immunohistochemical identification of lipoblasts in tumours of adipose differentiation was noted when the antibody was diluted 1:30 to 1:50. Small lipoblast-like fat cells in pleomorphic lipoma and spindle cell lipoma also showed variable staining for aP2 at this dilution of the antibody. Most benign and malignant soft tissue tumours were distinguished by their absence of staining for aP2 protein, but some cases of myxoma, malignant fibrous histiocytoma, synovial sarcoma and leiomyosarcoma contained tumour cells which reacted for aP2. aP2 protein expression is likely to prove a useful means of distinguishing lipoblasts in liposarcoma but it should be used as part of a tumour panel to exclude expression in other forms of mesenchymal tumour.
Notes:
2000
I Itonaga, Y Fujikawa, A Sabokbar, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (2000)  Rheumatoid arthritis synovial macrophage-osteoclast differentiation is osteoprotegerin ligand-dependent.   J Pathol 192: 1. 97-104 Sep  
Abstract: Osteoprotegerin ligand (OPGL) is a newly discovered molecule which is essential for osteoclast differentiation. Both OPGL and its soluble decoy receptor, osteoprotegerin (OPG), which inhibits osteoclast formation, are known to be produced by osteoblasts and inflammatory cells found in the rheumatoid arthritis (RA) synovium. In this study, RA synovial macrophages were incubated in the presence or absence of OPGL, macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF), and dexamethasone for various time points. The results indicated that osteoclast formation from RA synovial macrophages is OPGL-dependent and that OPGL and M-CSF are the only humoral factors required for RA synovial macrophage-osteoclast differentiation. OPG was found to inhibit osteoclast formation by RA synovial macrophages in a dose-dependent manner. This study has shown that macrophages isolated from the synovium of RA patients are capable of differentiating into osteoclastic bone-resorbing cells; this process is OPGL- and M-CSF-dependent and is modulated by corticosteroids. Cellular (T and B cells, dendritic cells) and humoral factors in RA synovium and bone may influence osteoclast formation and bone resorption by controlling OPGL/OPG production.
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M Jones, L Tussey, N Athanasou, D G Jackson (2000)  Heparan sulfate proteoglycan isoforms of the CD44 hyaluronan receptor induced in human inflammatory macrophages can function as paracrine regulators of fibroblast growth factor action.   J Biol Chem 275: 11. 7964-7974 Mar  
Abstract: The CD44 glycoprotein is expressed in multiple isoforms on a variety of cell types where it functions as a receptor for hyaluronan-mediated motility. Recently, interest has centered on CD44 heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) isoforms because of their potential to sequester heparin-binding growth factors and chemokines. Expression of these isoforms on ectodermal cells has recently been shown to regulate limb morphogenesis via presentation of fibroblast growth factor (FGF) 4/FGF 8 while expression on tumor cells was shown to sequester hepatocyte growth factor and promote tumor dissemination. To date, however, CD44 HSPG expression in tissue macrophages and lymphocytes has not been adequately investigated, despite the fact these cells actively synthesize growth factors and chemokines and indirect evidence that monocyte CD44 sequesters macrophage inflammatory protein-1beta. Here we show primary human monocytes rather than lymphocytes express CD44 HSPGs, but only following in vitro differentiation to macrophages or activation with the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-1alpha or bacterial lipopolysaccharide. Furthermore, we show these isoforms are preferentially modified with heparan rather than chondroitin sulfate, bind the macrophage-derived growth factors FGF-2, vascular endothelial growth factor, and heparin-binding epidermal growth factor with varying affinities (K(d) 25-330 nM) and in the case of FGF-2, can stimulate productive binding to the high affinity tyrosine kinase FGF receptor 1 (FGFR1). In contrast, we find no evidence for significant binding to C-C chemokines. Last, we confirm by immunofluorescent antibody staining that inflamed synovial membrane macrophages express CD44 HSPGs and that expression is greatest in cells containing high FGF-2 levels. These results suggest a paracrine role for macrophage CD44 HSPG isoforms in the regulation of growth factor action during inflammation.
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A Sabokbar, R Crawford, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (2000)  Macrophage-osteoclast differentiation and bone resorption in osteoarthrotic subchondral acetabular cysts.   Acta Orthop Scand 71: 3. 255-261 Jun  
Abstract: A macrophage infiltrate is commonly found in enlarging subchondral cysts in osteoarthrosis (OA) and the surrounding bone. To determine whether osteoclast differentiation by these cells contributes to the increase in the number of osteoclasts and bone resorption that accompanies OA cyst enlargement, we isolated macrophages from the wall of OA cysts and co-cultured them with osteoblast-like UMR106 cells in the presence or absence of 1,25(OH)2D3 and M-CSE After 14 days of incubation, co-cultures of UMR106 cells and cyst-derived macrophages showed evidence of osteoclast differentiation by expression of TRAP, VNR and formation of numerous lacunar pits. We found that, unlike osteoclast precursors in monocyte and other tissue macrophage populations, the addition of M-CSF to medium is not required for osteoclast differentiation. Our findings suggest that macrophage-osteoclast differentiation is one means whereby the osteolysis associated with the enlargement of OA cysts could be effected.
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I Itonaga, A Sabokbar, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (2000)  Effect of osteoprotegerin and osteoprotegerin ligand on osteoclast formation by arthroplasty membrane derived macrophages.   Ann Rheum Dis 59: 1. 26-31 Jan  
Abstract: Osteoprotegerin ligand (OPGL) is a newly discovered molecule, which is expressed by osteoblasts/bone stromal cells. This ligand and M-CSF are now known to be essential for osteoclast differentiation from marrow and circulating precursors. This study examined whether OPGL and its soluble receptor osteoprotegerin (OPG), influenced osteoclast formation from human arthroplasty derived macrophages, to determine if the effects of OPGL and OPG on these cells could contribute to the osteolysis of aseptic loosening.
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S D Neale, D R Haynes, D W Howie, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (2000)  The effect of particle phagocytosis and metallic wear particles on osteoclast formation and bone resorption in vitro.   J Arthroplasty 15: 5. 654-662 Aug  
Abstract: Osteoclasts are multinucleated bone-resorbing cells that are formed from precursors that circulate in the monocyte fraction. This study has determined the effect of phagocytosis of metal particles on osteoclast formation and bone resorption in vitro. Human peripheral blood monocytes were cocultured for 21 days with osteoblast-like UMR 106 cells, in the presence of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3, dexamethasone, and human macophage colony-stimulating factor. Cobalt-chrome alloy (CoCr), stainless steel (316L-SS), titanium alloy (TiAlV), and commercially pure titanium (cpTi) particles (size range, 0.5-3.0 microm) and 1.0-microm latex particles were added to the cocultures as a single dose at the beginning of each experiment. All 5 types of particles were readily phagocytosed by the monocytes. After 4 days' exposure to high concentrations of all the metal particles, some cell death was found in the cocultures. After 14 days, a reduction in the number of CD14+ cells was seen in cocultures exposed to high concentrations of metal particles, particularly CoCr and 316L-SS particles. Phagocytosis of latex particles by osteoclast precursors did not affect the ability of these cells to undergo osteoclast differentiation. In contrast, exposure to metal wear particle preparations caused a dose-dependent reduction in the number of vitronectin receptor-positive osteoclastic cells formed and a dose-dependent reduction in the bone resorption produced by these cells. This decrease in resorption was greater after exposure to CoCr and 316L-SS particles compared with TiAlV and cpTi particles. This in vitro cell culture system may provide a useful model to compare the effect of different prosthetic materials on human osteoclast formation and bone resorption.
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R Pandey, A R Berendt, N A Athanasou (2000)  Histological and microbiological findings in non-infected and infected revision arthroplasty tissues. The OSIRIS Collaborative Study Group. Oxford Skeletal Infection Research and Intervention Service.   Arch Orthop Trauma Surg 120: 10. 570-574  
Abstract: An assessment of clinical and laboratory findings is generally required to distinguish between septic and aseptic loosening of a hip implant. In order to evaluate the diagnostic utility of histological and microbiological investigative techniques to differentiate between these two conditions, we analysed their results in 617 patients with hip implant loosening. Histology and microbiology study confirmed the clinical diagnosis of septic loosening in approximately 98% and 89%. respectively. The clinical diagnosis of aseptic loosening was confirmed by histology in 99% of cases. In all but 2 of 81 cases of septic loosening, in which an organism was isolated on microbiological culture, the histological diagnosis of septic loosening was made on the basis of the degree of the acute inflammatory infiltrate (i.e. the presence of 1 or more neutrophil polymorphs per high power field (x 400) on average after examination of at least 10 high power fields) in periprosthetic tissues. In 10 patients for whom there was a strong clinical suspicion of septic loosening but no organisms were isolated on microbiological culture, the histological findings, using the above criteria, were in keeping with the clinical diagnosis of septic loosening. As almost 11% of cases of septic loosening would not have been diagnosed by microbiological investigation alone, our findings indicate that histological examination of periprosthetic tissues should form part of the investigative protocol to distinguish between aseptic and septic loosening.
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S D Neale, Y Fujikawa, A Sabokbar, R Gundle, D W Murray, S E Graves, D W Howie, N A Athanasou (2000)  Human bone-derived cells support formation of human osteoclasts from arthroplasty-derived cells in vitro.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 82: 6. 892-900 Aug  
Abstract: Mononuclear osteoclast precursors are present in the wear-particle-associated macrophage infiltrate found in the membrane surrounding loose implants. These cells are capable of differentiating into osteoclastic bone-resorbing cells when co-cultured with the rat osteoblast-like cell line, UMR 106, in the presence of 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D3. In order to develop an in vitro model of osteoclast differentiation which more closely parallels the cellular microenvironment at the bone-implant interface in situ, we determined whether osteoblast-like human bone-derived cells were capable of supporting the differentiation of osteoclasts from arthroplasty-derived cells and analysed the humoral conditions required for this to occur. Long-term co-culture of arthroplasty-derived cells and human trabecular-bone-derived cells (HBDCs) resulted in the formation of numerous tartrate-resistant-acid-phosphatase (TRAP) and vitronectin-receptor (VNR)-positive multinucleated cells capable of extensive resorption of lacunar bone. The addition of 1,25(OH)2 vitamin D3 was not required for the formation of osteoclasts and bone resorption. During the formation there was release of substantial levels of M-CSF and PGE2. Exogenous PGE2 (10(-8) to 10(-6) M) was found to stimulate strongly the resorption of osteoclastic bone. Our study has shown that HBDCs are capable of supporting the formation of osteoclasts from mononuclear phagocyte precursors present in the periprosthetic tissues surrounding a loose implant. The release of M-CSF and PGE2 by activated cells at the bone-implant interface may be important for the formation of osteoclasts at sites of pathological bone resorption associated with aseptic loosening.
Notes:
S D Neale, R Smith, J A Wass, N A Athanasou (2000)  Osteoclast differentiation from circulating mononuclear precursors in Paget's disease is hypersensitive to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) and RANKL.   Bone 27: 3. 409-416 Sep  
Abstract: A characteristic feature of Paget's disease is an increase in the number of osteoclasts in bone. Osteoclasts are formed from mononuclear phagocyte precursors that circulate in the monocyte fraction of peripheral blood. These cells require the presence of RANK ligand (RANKL)-expressing osteoblastic cells and human macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) to form osteoclasts in vitro. To determine the role of osteoclast differentiation from circulating precursors in Paget's disease, we cultured monocytes from Paget's patients and gender- and age-matched normal controls with no evidence of bone disease for up to 21 days in the presence of UMR 106 cells and various concentrations of M-CSF (1-25 ng/mL) and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) [1,25(OH)(2)D(3)] (10(-10) to 10(-7) mol/L). Relative to controls, there was a significant increase in the extent of osteoclast differentiation from pagetic monocytes as assessed by expression of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), vitronectin receptor (VNR), and lacunar bone resorption. Serial dilution experiments (2 x 10(5) to 2 x 10(2) cells/well) showed no difference in the concentration of osteoclast precursors in the peripheral blood. In Paget's patients with high serum alkaline phosphatase (sAP) levels, increased sensitivity to the osteoclastogenic effect of 1,25(OH)(2)D(3) was noted. Osteoclast differentiation did not occur when M-CSF was substituted by interleukin-6 (IL-6) and soluble IL-6 receptor (sIL-6R), and these factors did not stimulate osteoclast differentiation in the presence of M-CSF. In this in vitro coculture system, osteoclast formation was inhibited by osteoprotegerin in a dose-dependent manner. In the presence of RANKL (5-30 ng/mL) and M-CSF (25 ng/mL), osteoclast formation and bone resorption were significantly increased in cultures of monocytes from patients with high and low sAP levels as compared with normal controls. Our findings suggest that the increase in osteoclast numbers seen in Paget's disease results not from an increase in the number of circulating precursors in peripheral blood but rather from an increased sensitivity of osteoclast precursors to the humoral factors, 1,25(OH)(2)D(3) and RANKL, which regulate osteoclast formation.
Notes:
1999
R Crawford, B Puddle, N Hunt, N A Athanasou (1999)  Deposition of calcium pyrophosphate in tissue after revision arthroplasty of the hip.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 81: 3. 552-554 May  
Abstract: We reviewed histologically the incidence and pathogenesis of the deposition of calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD) crystals in the pseudocapsule, femoral and acetabular membranes and periprosthetic tissue at revision of 789 cases of failed total hip replacement. In 13, periprosthetic tissues were found to have deposits of CPPD crystals in areas of cartilaginous metaplasia; four also showed evidence of localised deposition of amyloid. None of the patients had a history of chondrocalcinosis in the hip or other joints. Cartilaginous metaplasia and other changes in periprosthetic tissues may predispose to the deposition of CPPD and associated localised amyloid.
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S J Ostlere, B McDonald, N A Athanasou (1999)  Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma associated with Goldenhar's syndrome.   Arch Orthop Trauma Surg 119: 5-6. 347-348  
Abstract: Goldenhar's syndrome is characterised by bony abnormalities of the face, jaw and vertebral column. We report the first case of the development of a primary malignant neoplasm (mesenchymal chondrosarcoma) initially misdiagnosed as a meningioma, occurring in association with this syndrome.
Notes:
R Pandey, E Drakoulakis, N A Athanasou (1999)  An assessment of the histological criteria used to diagnose infection in hip revision arthroplasty tissues.   J Clin Pathol 52: 2. 118-123 Feb  
Abstract: To characterise the number and nature of the inflammatory cells seen in cases of septic or aseptic loosening of hip arthroplasty, and to establish reliable histological criteria to distinguish between these two conditions.
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N A Athanasou, A Sabokbar (1999)  Human osteoclast ontogeny and pathological bone resorption.   Histol Histopathol 14: 2. 635-647 Apr  
Abstract: Monocytes and macrophages are capable of degrading both the mineral and organic components of bone and are known to secrete local factors which stimulate host osteoclastic bone resorption. Recent studies have shown that monocytes and macrophages, including those isolated from neoplastic and inflammatory lesions, can also be induced to differentiate into cells that show all the cytochemical and functional characteristics of mature osteoclasts, including lacunar bone resorption. Monocyte/macrophage-osteoclast differentiation occurs in the presence of osteoblasts/bone stromal cells (which express osteoclast differentiation factor) and macrophage-colony stimulating factor and is inhibited by osteoprotegerin. Various systemic hormones and local factors (e.g. cytokines, growth factors, prostaglandins) modulate osteoclast formation by controlling these cellular and humoral elements. Various pathological lesions of bone and joint (e.g. carcinomatous metastases, arthritis, aseptic loosening) are associated with osteolysis. These lesions generally contain a chronic inflammatory infiltrate in which macrophages form a significant fraction. One cellular mechanism whereby pathological bone resorption may be effected is through generation of increased numbers of bone-resorbing osteoclasts from macrophages. Production of humoral factors which stimulate mononuclear phagocyte-osteoclast differentiation and osteoclast activity is also likely to influence the extent of pathological bone resorption.
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S H Palmer, C L Gibbons, N A Athanasou (1999)  The pathology of bone allograft.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 81: 2. 333-335 Mar  
Abstract: We analysed the histological findings in 1146 osteoarthritic femoral heads which would have been considered suitable for bone-bank donation to determine whether pathological lesions, other than osteoarthritis, were present. We found that 91 femoral heads (8%) showed evidence of disease. The most common conditions noted were chondrocalcinosis (63 cases), avascular necrosis (13), osteomas (6) and malignant tumours (one case of low-grade chondrosarcoma and two of well-differentiated lymphocytic lymphoma). There were two with metabolic bone disease (Paget's disease and hyperparathyroid bone disease) and four with inflammatory (rheumatoid-like) arthritis. Our findings indicate that occult pathological conditions are common and it is recommended that histological examination of this regularly used source of bone allograft should be included as part of the screening protocol for bone-bank collection.
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C J Joyner, J Triffitt, B Puddle, N A Athanasou (1999)  Development of a monoclonal antibody to the aP2 protein to identify adipocyte precursors in tumours of adipose differentiation.   Pathol Res Pract 195: 7. 461-466  
Abstract: aP2 gene product (aP2 protein) expression has been shown to be a useful diagnostic marker for identification of lipoblasts and fetal fat cells in soft tissue tumours. A monoclonal antibody was developed by a mouse spleen cell-myeloma hybridoma technique to an 18 amino acid segment of the aP2 protein and was used to investigate the immunohistochemical expression of this protein in benign and malignant tumours of adipocytic differentiation and a wide variety of other soft tissue tumours. We found that aP2 protein was expressed by lipoblasts in liposarcomas and lipoblastomas and by brown fat cells in hibernomas and normal periadrenal fat. Other benign adipose tissue tumours and benign and malignant soft tissue tumours were distinguished from liposarcoma by absence of staining for aP2 protein. Immunohistochemical identification of the aP2 protein is likely to prove a useful means of distinguishing liposarcoma from other malignant mesenchymal and epithelial neoplasms, some of which contain cells that morphologically resemble lipoblasts.
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I Itonaga, A Sabokbar, S D Neale, N A Athanasou (1999)  1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D(3) and prostaglandin E(2) act directly on circulating human osteoclast precursors.   Biochem Biophys Res Commun 264: 2. 590-595 Oct  
Abstract: 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D(3) (1,25(OH)(2)D(3)) and prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) are known to influence osteoclast formation indirectly through their effects on osteoblasts. To determine whether 1, 25(OH)(2)D(3) and PGE(2) also have a direct effect on circulating osteoclast precursors, these factors were added to long-term cultures of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in the presence of osteoprotegerin ligand and macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) (+/-dexamethasone). The number of TRAP(+) and VNR(+) multinucleated cells and the area of lacunar resorption were decreased when 1,25(OH)(2)D(3) alone was added. A marked increase in resorption pit formation was noted when the combination of 1, 25(OH)(2)D(3) and dexamethasone was added to PBMC cultures. Dose-dependent inhibition of osteoclast formation and lacunar resorption was seen when PGE(2) was added to PBMC cultures in both the presence and the absence of dexamethasone. Thus, 1,25(OH)(2)D(3) and PGE(2) not only influence osteoclast formation in the presence of bone stromal cells but also act directly on circulating osteoclast precursors to influence osteoclast differentiation.
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S S Varanasi, N A Athanasou, I Briceno, S S Papiha, H K Datta (1999)  Association of HLA-DRB1 alleles with giant cell tumour of bone.   J Clin Pathol 52: 10. 782-784 Oct  
Abstract: To examine the possible influence of the MHC class II antigens alleles in the formation of the multinucleate aggressive giant cell tumour of bone.
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S D Neale, N A Athanasou (1999)  Cytokine receptor profile of arthroplasty macrophages, foreign body giant cells and mature osteoclasts.   Acta Orthop Scand 70: 5. 452-458 Oct  
Abstract: In the arthroplasty pseudomembrane surrounding a loose prosthesis there is a marked macrophage and foreign body giant cell (FBGC) response to implant-derived wear particles. These cells contribute to the osteolysis of loosening by releasing cytokines and growth factors which influence the formation and activity of osteoclasts. Using a panel of monoclonal antibodies directed against known cytokine/growth factor receptors, we have determined by immunohistochemistry whether arthroplasty macrophages, FB-GCs and osteoclasts express receptors for cytokines and growth factors that are known to modulate osteolysis. All these cell types reacted with antibodies directed against the following cytokine/growth factor receptors: gp130, IL-1R type 1, IL-2R, IL-4R, IL-6R, TNFR, M-CSFR, GM-CSFR and SCFR but not with antibodies directed against IL-3R and IL-8R. Arthroplasty macrophages, FBGCs and osteoclasts thus show a similar pattern of cytokine/growth factor receptor expression. This reflects the fact that arthroplasty macrophages are capable of osteoclast differentiation and that these cell types form part of the mononuclear phagocyte system. As regards the osteolysis of aseptic loosening, it also indicates that these cells are targets for numerous cytokines and growth factors which influence osteoclast formation and bone resorption.
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D J Commins, S O'Malley, N A Athanasou, S Jalloh (1999)  Giant cell tumour of the hyoid--first reported case.   J Laryngol Otol 113: 6. 566-568 Jun  
Abstract: Giant cell tumours of bone are most commonly found in the epiphyses of weight-bearing long bones. They are rarely found in the head and neck and only 17 cases involving the laryngeal framework have been reported. To date, there have been no reports of a giant cell tumour arising from the hyoid bone. We present such a case which presented as a lump overlying the greater cornu of the hyoid, review the literature and discuss the management of this locally aggressive tumour.
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S D Neale, A Sabokbar, D W Howie, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (1999)  Macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interleukin-6 release by periprosthetic cells stimulates osteoclast formation and bone resorption.   J Orthop Res 17: 5. 686-694 Sep  
Abstract: Periprosthetic bone loss is an important contributory factor for aseptic loosening of total joint replacements. It has recently been shown that osteoclast precursor cells are present in the wear particle-associated macrophage infiltrate found in the membrane surrounding loose implants and that these cells are capable of differentiating into osteoclastic bone-resorbing cells. Long-term co-culture of arthroplasty-derived macrophages and the rat osteoblast-like cell line, UMR-106, in the presence of 1,25(OH)2D3 results in the formation of numerous multinucleated cells that are positive for tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase and vitronectin receptor and capable of extensive lacunar bone resorption. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of cytokines/growth factors, known to be present in the arthroplasty membrane, on this process of osteoclast differentiation. During osteoclast formation, increased levels of macrophage colony-stimulating factor, interleukin-6, and to a lesser extent, interleukin-1beta, but not tumour necrosis factor alpha, were detected in the co-culture supernatants. Addition of neutralising antibodies to human interleukin-1beta or tumour necrosis factor alpha to the co-culture system did not inhibit osteoclast formation. In contrast, co-cultures to which neutralising antibodies to human macrophage colony-stimulating factor or interleukin-6 were added contained fewer cells positive for tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase and vitronectin receptor and formed significantly fewer resorption pits. Time-course studies showed that macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interleukin-6 increase osteoclast formation mainly in the early stages of osteoclast differentiation. These results indicate that the release of macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interleukin-6 by activated cells in the arthroplasty membrane is likely to contribute to pathological bone resorption associated with aseptic loosening by stimulating differentiation of mononuclear phagocyte osteoclast precursors into mature bone-resorbing cells.
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H C Brownlow, G Ioannidis, M C Gibbons, A C Jones, N Athanasou (1999)  Digital metastases of giant cell rich malignant fibrous histiocytoma.   Sarcoma 3: 3-4. 167-170  
Abstract: Background. Metastatic spread of soft tissue sarcomas to the digits is extremely rare and metastasis of MFH to the fingers and toes has not been documented.Purpose. We present two case reports of metastatic spread from a giant cell rich malignant fibrous histiocytoma to the digits and discuss their management.
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1998
R Crawford, N A Athanasou (1998)  Beta 2-microglobulin amyloid deposition in hip revision arthroplasty tissues.   Histopathology 33: 5. 479-484 Nov  
Abstract: Hip joint disease associated with progressive amyloid deposition in uraemic patients receiving chronic haemodialysis treatment often requires treatment by joint arthroplasty. The aim of this study was to determine whether beta 2-microglobulin amyloid deposition occurred in the periprosthetic tissues of arthroplasties that had undergone aseptic loosening and required a revision procedure.
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R Crawford, A Sabokbar, A Wulke, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (1998)  Expansion of an osteoarthritic cyst associated with wear debris: a case report.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 80: 6. 990-993 Nov  
Abstract: We present a case in which the growth of an intraosseous cyst arising from the proximal tibiofibular joint appeared to have been increased by polyethylene wear particles from a medial unicompartmental knee replacement. Histological examination of the cyst wall showed a histiocytic response associated with numerous polyethylene wear particles. This case demonstrates that there is a direct communication between the joint cavity and the cyst. Such communication is probably through openings in the articular cartilage large enough to allow the passage of these particles.
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J M Quinn, S Neale, Y Fujikawa, J O McGee, N A Athanasou (1998)  Human osteoclast formation from blood monocytes, peritoneal macrophages, and bone marrow cells.   Calcif Tissue Int 62: 6. 527-531 Jun  
Abstract: Mononuclear precursors of the human osteoclast have been identified in both bone marrow and the circulation in man, but osteoclast membership of the mononuclear phagocyte system (MPS) and its precise cellular ontogeny remain controversial. We isolated human hematopoietic marrow cells, blood monocytes, and peritoneal macrophages and incubated each of these cell populations with UMR106 osteoblast-like cells on glass coverslips and dentine slices in both the presence and absence of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3), macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF), and dexamethasone. Cells isolated from peripheral blood and peritoneal dialysis fluid were positive only for monocyte/macrophage markers (CD11a, CD11b, CD14, and HLA-DR) and negative for osteoclast markers [tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), vitronectin reception (VNR), and calcitonin (CT) receptors and did not form resorption pits on dentine slices after 24 hours in culture. Similarly marrow cells did not form resorption pits on dentine slices after 24 hours in culture. However, after 14 days in co-culture with UMR106 cells, in the presence of 1,25(OH)2D3 and M-CSF, numerous TRAP, CT receptor, and VNR-positive multinucleated cells capable of extensive lacunar resorption were formed in co-cultures of all these preparations. The presence of 1,25 (OH)2D3, M-CSF, and UMR106 were absolute requirements for osteoclast differentiation. It is concluded that precursor cells capable of osteoclast differentiation are present in the marrow compartment, the monocyte fraction of peripheral blood, and in the macrophage compartment of extraskeletal tissues and that these cells are capable of differentiating into mature functional osteoclasts. These findings argue in favor of osteoclast membership of the human MPS.
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J M Quinn, J O McGee, N A Athanasou (1998)  Human tumour-associated macrophages differentiate into osteoclastic bone-resorbing cells.   J Pathol 184: 1. 31-36 Jan  
Abstract: Macrophages are commonly found within osteolytic secondary carcinomas in bone, but the manner in which these cells contribute to malignant bone resorption is uncertain. Macrophages isolated from primary breast carcinomas were co-cultured for up to 21 days with UMR 106 rat osteoblast-like cells on bone slices and glass coverslips in the presence and absence of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D3] and human macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF). Cell cultures were then assessed for the presence of phenotypic markers of macrophage and osteoclast differentiation. Isolated cells were negative for osteoclast markers including tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), vitronectin receptor (VNR), and the ability to carry our lacunar bone resorption, but were positive for CD11b and CD14, macrophage markers which are not present on osteoclasts. In 21-day co-cultures of breast carcinoma tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) and UMR 106 cells, incubated in the presence of 1,25(OH)2D3 and M-CSF, numerous TRAP- and VNR-positive multinucleated cells capable of extensive lacunar resorption were formed. Contact with UMR 106 cells and the presence of 1,25(OH)2D3 and M-CSF were absolute requirements for differentiation of human breast carcinoma TAMs into mature functional osteoclasts. TAM-osteoclast differentiation may represent an important cellular mechanism of osteolysis in metastatic skeletal carcinomas.
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A Sabokbar, R Pandey, J M Quinn, N A Athanasou (1998)  Osteoclastic differentiation by mononuclear phagocytes containing biomaterial particles.   Arch Orthop Trauma Surg 117: 3. 136-140  
Abstract: Aseptic loosening of implant components is a common and important complication of both cemented and uncemented prosthetic joint replacements. Wear particles derived from organic polymer and metal implant biomaterials are commonly found within macrophages and macrophage polykaryons in the fibrous membrane between loose implant components and the host bone undergoing resorption. In order to determine whether biomaterial particle-containing, foreign-body macrophages may contribute to periprosthetic bone resorption, we cultured murine monocytes that had phagocytosed particles of biomaterials commonly employed in bone implant surgery [polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA), ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (PE), titanium and chromium-cobalt] on bone slices and glass coverslips with UMR 106 osteoblast-like stromal cells in the presence of 1,25-dihydroxy-vitamin D3. Under these conditions, all biomaterial particle-containing, foreign-body macrophages differentiated into osteoclastic cells, i.e. tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP)-positive multinucleated cells capable of extensive lacunar bone resorption. This study shows that particle phagocytosis by macrophages does not abrogate the ability of these cells to undergo osteoclast differentiation. These findings emphasise the importance of the foreign-body macrophage response to biomaterial wear particles in the pathogenesis of aseptic loosening.
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A Sabokbar, Y Fujikawa, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (1998)  Bisphosphonates in bone cement inhibit PMMA particle induced bone resorption.   Ann Rheum Dis 57: 10. 614-618 Oct  
Abstract: Wear particle induced bone resorption is thought to be one of the mechanisms that contribute to implant loosening. It has previously been shown that macrophages, in response to polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) particles, differentiate into bone resorbing osteoclasts, and that this process is inhibited by a bisphosphonate, etidronate (EHDP). The aim of this study was to determine whether incorporating EHDP in bone cement could reduce PMMA associated bone resorption.
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B L Atkins, N Athanasou, J J Deeks, D W Crook, H Simpson, T E Peto, P McLardy-Smith, A R Berendt (1998)  Prospective evaluation of criteria for microbiological diagnosis of prosthetic-joint infection at revision arthroplasty. The OSIRIS Collaborative Study Group.   J Clin Microbiol 36: 10. 2932-2939 Oct  
Abstract: A prospective study was performed to establish criteria for the microbiological diagnosis of prosthetic joint infection at elective revision arthroplasty. Patients were treated in a multidisciplinary unit dedicated to the management and study of musculoskeletal infection. Standard multiple samples of periprosthetic tissue were obtained at surgery, Gram stained, and cultured by direct and enrichment methods. With reference to histology as the criterion standard, sensitivities, specificities, and likelihood ratios (LRs) were calculated by using different cutoffs for the diagnosis of infection. We performed revisions on 334 patients over a 17-month period, of whom 297 were evaluable. The remaining 37 were excluded because histology results were unavailable or could not be interpreted due to underlying inflammatory joint disease. There were 41 infections, with only 65% of all samples sent from infected patients being culture positive, suggesting low numbers of bacteria in the samples taken. The isolation of an indistinguishable microorganism from three or more independent specimens was highly predictive of infection (sensitivity, 65%; specificity, 99.6%; LR, 168.6), while Gram staining was less useful (sensitivity, 12%; specificity, 98%; LR, 10). A simple mathematical model was developed to predict the performance of the diagnostic test. We recommend that five or six specimens be sent, that the cutoff for a definite diagnosis of infection be three or more operative specimens that yield an indistinguishable organism, and that because of its low level of sensitivity, Gram staining should be abandoned as a diagnostic tool at elective revision arthroplasty.
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1997
W Wang, D J Ferguson, J M Quinn, A H Simpson, N A Athanasou (1997)  Osteoclasts are capable of particle phagocytosis and bone resorption.   J Pathol 182: 1. 92-98 May  
Abstract: Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells specialized for the function of lacunar bone resorption. Although they are known to be capable of phagocytosis of inert particles, it is not known whether this abolishes their ability to respond to hormones or to form resorption lacunae. Human and rat osteoclasts were isolated from giant cell tumours of bone and rat long bones, respectively, and cultured on coverslips and cortical bone slices, both in the presence and in the absence of particles of latex (1 micron diameter) and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) (< 50 microns). By light microscopy, it was evident that osteoclasts which had phagocytosed both latex and PMMA particles remained responsive to calcitonin. Osteoclast phagocytosis of particles was also evident on scanning electron microscopy, where it could also be seen that these cells were associated with the formation of resorption lacunae. These findings underline the fact that the osteoclast is a true member of the mononuclear phagocyte system and that phagocytosis does not abrogate either its hormonal response to calcitonin or its highly specialized function of bone resorption. That osteoclasts which have phagocytosed biomaterial particles such as PMMA are still able to carry out lacunar bone resorption is of interest in clinical conditions such as aseptic loosening, where a heavy foreign body particle load is often associated with extensive bone resorption.
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J M Quinn, Y Fujikawa, J O McGee, N A Athanasou (1997)  Rodent osteoblast-like cells support osteoclastic differentiation of human cord blood monocytes in the presence of M-CSF and 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3.   Int J Biochem Cell Biol 29: 1. 173-179 Jan  
Abstract: Fracture repair requires the involvement of osteoclasts (OC), multinucleated cells which are responsible for bone resorption and form by fusion of circulating mononuclear haemopoietic precursors. The nature of these circulating precursor cells, in particular their relationship to blood monocytes, is uncertain. To define further the nature of the circulating human OC precursor, and to determine the role bone stromal cells and humoral factors play in the differentiation of OCs, we co-cultured human umbilical cord blood monocytes with UMR106.01 osteoblast-like cells in the presence and absence of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25 (OH)2D3], macrophage-colony stimulating factor (M-CSF) and dexamethasone on both bone slices and coverslips. Isolated cells were positive only for monocyte/macrophage markers (CD11a, CD11b, CD14 and HLA-DR) and negative for OC markers [tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), vitronectin receptors (VNR) and calcitonin receptors (CT receptors)] and did not form resorption pits on bone slices after 24 hr in culture. However, after 14 days in co-culture with UMR106.01 cells, in the presence of 1,25 (OH)2D3 and M-CSF, numerous TRAP, CT receptor and VNR positive multinucleated cells capable of extensive lacunar bone resorption were formed in these co-cultures. The presence of 1,25 (OH)2D3, M-CSF and a bone-derived stromal cell population were absolute requirements for OC differentiation. It is concluded that mononuclear phagocytes are capable of differentiating into mature functional OCs when cultured under specific cellular and hormonal conditions. This is vitro model of human OC differentiation should prove useful in further analysing factors controlling OC generation in bone remodelling and repair.
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A Sabokbar, Y Fujikawa, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (1997)  Radio-opaque agents in bone cement increase bone resorption.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 79: 1. 129-134 Jan  
Abstract: A heavy infiltrate of foreign-body macrophages is commonly seen in the fibrous membrane which surrounds an aseptically loose cemented implant. This is in response to particles of polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) bone cement and other biomaterials. We have previously shown that monocytes and macrophages responding to particles of bone cement are capable of differentiating into osteoclastic cells which resorb bone. To determine whether the radio-opaque additives barium sulphate (BaSO4) and zirconium dioxide (ZrO2) influence this process, particles of PMMA with and without these agents were added to mouse monocytes and cocultured with osteoblast-like cells on bone slices. Osteoclast differentiation, as shown by the presence of the osteoclast-associated enzyme tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) and lacunar bone resorption, was observed in all cocultures. The addition of PMMA alone to these cocultures caused no increase in TRAP expression or bone resorption relative to control cocultures. Adding PMMA particles containing BaSO4 or ZrO2, however, caused an increase in TRAP expression and a highly significant increase in bone resorption. Particles containing BaSO4 were associated with 50% more bone resorption than those containing ZrO2. Our results suggest that radio-opaque agents in bone cement may contribute to the bone resorption of aseptic loosening by enhancing macrophage-osteoclast differentiation, and that PMMA containing BaSO4 is likely to be associated with more osteolysis than that containing ZrO2.
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S D Neale, R Kristelly, R Gundle, J M Quinn, N A Athanasou (1997)  Giant cells in pigmented villo nodular synovitis express an osteoclast phenotype.   J Clin Pathol 50: 7. 605-608 Jul  
Abstract: To determine the cytochemical and functional phenotype of multinucleated giant cells in pigmented villo nodular synovitis (PVNS).
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J M Quinn, A Sabokbar, M Denne, M C de Vernejoul, J O McGee, N A Athanasou (1997)  Inhibitory and stimulatory effects of prostaglandins on osteoclast differentiation.   Calcif Tissue Int 60: 1. 63-70 Jan  
Abstract: The effect of prostaglandins (PGs) on osteoclast differentiation, an important point of control for bone resorption, is poorly understood. After an initial differentiation phase that lasts at least 4 days, murine monocytes, cocultured with UMR106 osteoblastic cells (in the presence of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) give rise to tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) positive osteoclast-like cells that are capable of lacunar bone resorption. PGE2 strongly inhibits TRAP expression and bone resorption in these cocultures. To examine further the cellular mechanisms associated with this inhibitory effect, we added PGE2 to monocyte/UMR106 cocultures at specific times before, during, and after this initial 4-day differentiation period. To determine whether this PGE2 inhibition was dependent on the type of stromal cell supporting osteoclast differentiation, we also added PGE2 to cocultures of monocytes with ST2 preadipocytic cells. Inhibition of bone resorption was greatly reduced when the addition of PGE2 to monocyte/UMR106 cocultures was delayed until the fourth day of incubation; when delayed until the seventh day, inhibition did not occur. PGE2 inhibition of bone resorption was concentration-dependent and at 10(-6) M was also mediated by PGE1 and PGF2alpha. In contrast to its effects on monocyte/UMR106 cocultures, PGE2 stimulated bone resorption in monocyte/ST2 cocultures. Both ST2 cells and UMR106 cells were shown to express functional receptors for PGE2.These results show that PGs strongly influence the differentiation of osteoclast precursors and that this effect is dependent not only on the type and dose of PG administered, but also on the nature of the bone-derived stromal cell supporting this process.
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W Wang, D J Ferguson, J M Quinn, A H Simpson, N A Athanasou (1997)  Biomaterial particle phagocytosis by bone-resorbing osteoclasts.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 79: 5. 849-856 Sep  
Abstract: Abundant implant-derived biomaterial wear particles are generated in aseptic loosening and are deposited in periprosthetic tissues in which they are phagocytosed by mononuclear and multinucleated macrophage-like cells. It has been stated that the multinucleated cells which contain wear particles are not bone-resorbing osteoclasts. To investigate the validity of this claim we isolated human osteoclasts from giant-cell tumours of bone and rat osteoclasts from long bones. These were cultured on glass coverslips and on cortical bone slices in the presence of particles of latex, PMMA and titanium. Osteoclast phagocytosis of these particle types was shown by light microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray analysis and SEM. Giant cells containing phagocytosed particles were seen to be associated with the formation of resorption lacunae. Osteoclasts containing particles were also calcitonin-receptor-positive and showed an inhibitory response to calcitonin. Our findings demonstrate that osteoclasts are capable of phagocytosing particles of a wide range of size, including particles of polymeric and metallic biomaterials found in periprosthetic tissues, and that after particle phagocytosis, they remain fully functional, hormone-responsive, bone-resorbing cells.
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A Sabokbar, Y Fujikawa, S Neale, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (1997)  Human arthroplasty derived macrophages differentiate into osteoclastic bone resorbing cells.   Ann Rheum Dis 56: 7. 414-420 Jul  
Abstract: In aseptic loosening, a heavy macrophage response to biomaterial wear particles is commonly found in arthroplasty tissues. The aim of this study was to discover if these cells contribute to the bone resorption of aseptic loosening by differentiating into osteoclasts.
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1996
R Smith, N A Athanasou, S E Vipond (1996)  Fibrodysplasia (myositis) ossificans progressiva: clinicopathological features and natural history.   QJM 89: 6. 445-446 Jun  
Abstract: Patients with fibrodysplasia (myositis) ossificans progressiva (FOP) (n = 28) were studied for up to 24 years. All had characteristic short big toes potentially recognizable at birth; there were radiographic changes in the toes, thumbs, cervical spine and metaphyses of the long bones, including exostoses. Ossification in the large skeletal muscles began from birth to 16 years (mean age 4.6 years) initially in 25 patients in the neck and upper spinal muscles, and later around the hips, major joints and jaw. The rate and extent of disability was unrelated to the time of onset. There was no evidence that any form of treatment produced consistent benefit. Despite the unique combination of skeletal abnormalities and ectopic ossification, the first diagnosis in patients with FOP was often wrong and usually delayed after ectopic ossification began (mean 2.7 years, range 0-14). Except where presentation was unusual, such as progressive stiffness, this delay was mainly due to failure to recognize the significance of the abnormal toes. The most frequent erroneous histological diagnoses were soft tissue sarcoma or fibromatosis. This series emphasizes the usually incorrect initial diagnosis, the misinterpretation of the histology, the unpredictable prognosis and the failure of current treatment. Despite its extreme rarity, there is a need for wider knowledge of this condition both to avoid clinical errors and to stimulate research.
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A Sabokbar, Y Fujikawa, J Brett, D W Murray, N A Athanasou (1996)  Increased osteoclastic differentiation by PMMA particle-associated macrophages. Inhibitory effect by interleukin 4 and leukemia inhibitory factor.   Acta Orthop Scand 67: 6. 593-598 Dec  
Abstract: To determine the influence of polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) wear particles on macrophage-osteoclast differentiation, PMMA particles were added to mouse monocytes which were cocultured with UMR 106 osteoblast-like cells in the presence of 1,25 dihydroxy vitamin D3[1,25(OH)2D3] for up to 7 days on glass coverslips and for up to 14 days on human cortical bone slices. An increase in osteoclast differentiation, as evidenced by the expression of the osteoclast-associated enzyme tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) and the extent of lacunar bone resorption, was observed in monocyte cultures to which PMMA had been added. Interleukin 4 (IL-4) and Leukemia Inhibitory Factor (LIF) added to these cocultures caused considerably less expression of TRAP and significant inhibition of lacunar bone resorption. This inhibitory effect was reversed by the addition of specific neutralizing antibodies to LIF and IL-4. These findings show that PMMA-wear particle-associated macrophages exhibit an enhanced capacity for differentiation to osteoclastic bone-resorbing cells.
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R Pandey, J Quinn, C Joyner, D W Murray, J T Triffitt, N A Athanasou (1996)  Arthroplasty implant biomaterial particle associated macrophages differentiate into lacunar bone resorbing cells.   Ann Rheum Dis 55: 6. 388-395 Jun  
Abstract: To study the pathogenesis of aseptic loosening: in particular, to determine whether macrophages responding to particles of biomaterials commonly used in arthroplasty surgery for arthritis are capable of differentiating into osteoclastic bone resorbing cells, and the cellular and hormonal conditions required for this to occur.
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Y Fujikawa, A Sabokbar, S Neale, N A Athanasou (1996)  Human osteoclast formation and bone resorption by monocytes and synovial macrophages in rheumatoid arthritis.   Ann Rheum Dis 55: 11. 816-822 Nov  
Abstract: To determine whether synovial macrophages and monocytes isolated from patients with rheumatoid arthritis patients are capable of differentiating into osteoclastic bone resorbing cells; and the cellular and humoral conditions required for this to occur.
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Y Fujikawa, J M Quinn, A Sabokbar, J O McGee, N A Athanasou (1996)  The human osteoclast precursor circulates in the monocyte fraction.   Endocrinology 137: 9. 4058-4060 Sep  
Abstract: The osteoclast is known to be formed by fusion of circulating mononuclear precursor cells of haematopoietic origin. The precise nature of these circulating cells and, in particular, their relation to monocytes is unknown. We have developed an in vitro system of human osteoclast formation whereby human monocytes [CD14, CD11a, CD11b and HLA-DR positive, and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), calcitonin receptor (CTR), vitronectin receptor (VNR) negative] were isolated and cocultured for up to 21 days with UMR106 rat osteoblast-like cells or ST2 mouse preadipocytic bone marrow stromal cells in the presence of 1 alpha, 25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3) and macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF). Numerous TRAP, VNR and CTR positive multinucleated cells, capable of extensive lacunar bone resorption, formed in these cocultures; the absolute requirements for this to occur were contact with the above bone stromal cells, 1,25(OH)2D3, and M-CSF. These results show that the human mononuclear osteoclast precursor circulates in the monocyte fraction and exhibits a monocyte phenotype, acquiring osteoclast phenotypic features in the process of differentiation into mature functional osteoclasts.
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V Gattei, D Aldinucci, J M Quinn, M Degan, M Cozzi, V Perin, A D Iuliis, S Juzbasic, S Improta, N A Athanasou, L K Ashman, A Pinto (1996)  Human osteoclasts and preosteoclast cells (FLG 29.1) express functional c-kit receptors and interact with osteoblast and stromal cells via membrane-bound stem cell factor.   Cell Growth Differ 7: 6. 753-763 Jun  
Abstract: Bone remodeling requires cooperation between osteoclasts and other specialized or accessory bone cell populations by mechanisms that have not been completely elucidated. Here we describe the expression and functional role of the proto-oncogene c-kit and of its specific ligand stem cell factor (SCF) on human osteoclasts, osteoblasts, and stromal cells derived from different sources. Our results indicate that primary osteoclasts in imprints of metaphyseal bone and giant cell tumors (GCTs) of bone, as well as a bone marrow-derived preosteoclast cell line of human origin (FLG 29.1), expressed immunodetectable c-kit protein. In contrast, tissue osteoclasts did not react with anti-SCF antibodies, and barely detectable levels of SCF mRNA and protein were found in FLG 29.1 cells. Conversely, a strong expression of membrane bound-SCF was found in primary cultured bone marrow stromal cells, in a stromal cell line (C433) derived from the mononuclear component of GCT of bone, and in a human cell line with osteoblast features (Saos-2). FLG 29.1 preosteoclast cells displayed about 29,000 binding sites/cell of a single class of high affinity c-kit receptors (Kd 6.12 x 10(-10) mol/L) with a molecular weight of about 140 kDa, along with a structurally normal c-kit mRNA. Proliferation of FLG 29.1 preosteoclast cells was stimulated by exogenous SCF, indicating that c-kit was capable of transducing growth signals. Finally, in vitro adhesion of FLG 29.1 cells to primary bone marrow stromal cells, GCT-derived stromal cells (C433), and Saos-2 osteoblast cells was significantly inhibited by an excess of soluble SCF or by monoclonal antibodies recognizing SCF binding sites on the c-kit receptor. These results indicate that c-kit is constitutively expressed on human osteoclasts and that it may be directly implicated in cell contact-dependent interaction of osteoclasts with other specialized or accessory cell populations of the bone microenvironment. Our observations suggest a role for SCF in human diseases characterized by abnormal bone resorption and remodeling.
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R Pandey, J M Quinn, A Sabokbar, N A Athanasou (1996)  Bisphosphonate inhibition of bone resorption induced by particulate biomaterial-associated macrophages.   Acta Orthop Scand 67: 3. 221-228 Jun  
Abstract: Aseptic loosening of total joint replacements is associated with bone resorption. A heavy infiltrate of foreign body macrophages in response to biomaterial wear particles is commonly found in the fibrous membrane surrounding loose components. It has recently been shown that foreign body macrophages can differentiate into osteoclastic cells. To determine whether pharmacological inhibitors of bone resorption have a role to play in controlling the osteolysis of aseptic loosening, we analyzed the effect of a bisphosphonate, disodium ethane-1, 1-diphosphonate (EHDP) on this process. Murine monocytes and foreign body macrophages (derived from granulomas formed by subcutaneous implantation of particles of prosthetic biomaterials) were co-cultured with UMR106 osteoblast-like cells in the presence of 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3 for 14 days on glass coverslips and bone slices. EHDP significantly inhibited bone resorption in these co-cultures. There was little or no expression of the osteoclast-associated enzyme, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) in EHDP-treated co-cultures. Addition of EHDP to monocyte-UMR106 co-cultures after the appearance of TRAP-positive cells did not abolish bone resorption, indicating that EHDP, in addition to its known inhibitory effect on osteoclast function, suppresses differentiation of osteoclast precursors. EHDP inhibition of the osteolysis induced by particulate biomaterial-associated macrophages shows that pharmacological inhibition of bone resorption might be used to control the osteolysis of aseptic loosening.
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J M Quinn, A Sabokbar, N A Athanasou (1996)  Cells of the mononuclear phagocyte series differentiate into osteoclastic lacunar bone resorbing cells.   J Pathol 179: 1. 106-111 May  
Abstract: Although the osteoclast shares several features with other cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system (MPS), its precise cellular ontogeny is unknown, and its membership of the MPS is controversial. This study examined whether various cells of the MPS can be induced to differentiate into cells capable of the highly specialized osteoclastic function of lacunar bone resorption. We isolated mouse and rat monocytes, mouse (liver, peritoneal, alveolar, brain) tissue macrophages, and spleen and marrow haemopoietic cells, as well as foreign body macrophages and macrophage polykaryons derived from subcutaneous granulomas formed by implantation of latex beads and coverslips in mice. When these cells were incubated with UMR106 osteoblast-like cells on glass coverslips and human cortical bone slices in the presence of 1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D3] for 7 and 14 days, numerous tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase-positive cells formed in these co-cultures and scanning electron microscopy revealed extensive lacunar resorption of the bone surface. Bone resorption was seen as early as 4 days after monocytes were co-cultured with UMR106 cells. With the exception of bone marrow-derived cells, lacunar resorption was not seen in the absence of UMR106 cells. These findings show that a bone-derived stromal cell element is necessary for differentiation of monocytes and tissue and inflammatory macrophages into osteoclast-like cells capable of extensive lacunar bone resorption, and would argue in favour of osteoclast membership of the MPS.
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1995
N A Athanasou, B Puddle, B Sallie (1995)  Highly sulphated glycosaminoglycans in articular cartilage and other tissues containing beta 2 microglobulin dialysis amyloid deposits.   Nephrol Dial Transplant 10: 9. 1672-1678  
Abstract: Highly sulphated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are a common constituent of amyloid deposits and an integral component of articular connective tissues where beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2M) amyloid is most often found.
Notes:
N A Athanasou, S Kokubun, L West, B Sallie, B Puddle (1995)  Glycosaminoglycans in intervertebral disc amyloid deposits.   Eur Spine J 4: 5. 308-312  
Abstract: Intervertebral discs are a common site of localized articular and some forms of systemic articular amyloid deposition. Whether there is an intrinsic matrix factor that favours amyloid deposition in intervertebral disc connective tissues is uncertain, but it is known that small localized deposits of amyloid in intervertebral discs are largely age related. As the glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) composition of the intervertebral disc is known to change with age, and as some forms of systemic amyloid deposition have been shown to be associated with particular highly sulphated GAGs, we examined the GAGs profile of amyloid deposits in intervertebral discs using mucin histochemistry (Alcian blue: MgCl2 critical electrolyte concentration) and immunohistochemistry. We found strong staining for very highly sulphated GAGs (0.9 M and 1 M MgCl2) and confirmed the presence of keratan sulphate in both localized and systemic, dialysis-associated beta 2-microglobulin amyloid deposits within disc fibrocartilage. These findings suggest that qualitative and quantitative changes in matrix GAGs, particularly strongly sulphated GAGs such as keratan sulphate, may play a role in the pathogenesis of localized and systemic amyloid deposition in intervertebral discs.
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C B Koay, A P Freeland, N A Athanasou (1995)  Chondromyxoid fibroma of the nasal bone with extension into the frontal and ethmoidal sinuses.   J Laryngol Otol 109: 3. 258-261 Mar  
Abstract: Chondromyxoid fibroma is a rare benign tumour whose histological appearance may easily be misinterpreted as chondrosarcoma. It has a tendency to recur locally unless completely excised. A rare case of the tumour affecting the nasal bone with extension into the frontal and ethmoidal sinuses and impingement on the cribiform plate is presented. Complete excision was achieved by the craniofacial resection approach.
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N A Athanasou, L West, B Sallie, B Puddle (1995)  Localized amyloid deposition in cartilage is glycosaminoglycans-associated.   Histopathology 26: 3. 267-272 Mar  
Abstract: Localized amyloid deposition is known to occur commonly in the articular cartilage of elderly patients. Its pathogenesis is uncertain and it is not known if other cartilage-containing tissues also contain amyloid deposits. Systemic amyloid deposits are known to contain highly sulphated glycosaminoglycans, a major constituent of cartilage. As the composition of articular cartilage glycosaminoglycans is known to change with age, we sought to identify whether localized amyloid deposition in cartilage was glycosaminoglycan-related. We examined specimens of articular cartilage over a wide age range and also examined a variety of cartilaginous tumours and tumour-like lesions for the presence or absence of amyloid deposits. Using mucin histochemistry (alcian blue: MgCl2 critical electrolyte concentration) and immunohistochemistry, we found that highly sulphated glycosaminoglycans (0.9 M and 1 M MgCl2), in particular keratan sulphate, localized to amyloid deposits in both articular cartilage and loose bodies derived from the articular surface. Other cartilaginous lesions (including loose bodies of primary synovial chondromatosis) were negative for amyloid and did not contain highly sulphated glycosaminoglycans. These findings suggest that changes in specific highly sulphated glycosaminoglycans may play a role in localized amyloid deposition in articular cartilage.
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A J Carr, R Smith, N Athanasou, C G Woods (1995)  Fibrogenesis imperfecta ossium.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 77: 5. 820-829 Sep  
Abstract: The clinical features, investigation, treatment and outcome of two adults with fibrogenesis imperfecta ossium are described. In this rare acquired disorder of bone, normal lamellar collagen is replaced by structurally unsound collagen-deficient tissue, which leads to extreme bone fragility and ununited fractures. Transmission microscopy and SEM showed striking ultrastructural changes in bone structure and mineralisation. Both patients had monoclonal IgG paraproteins in the plasma and one excreted monoclonal lambda light chains in the urine. No abnormal plasma cells were found in the bone marrow and there was no evidence of amyloid deposition in the tissues. In both patients initial treatment with 1 alpha-hydroxycholecalciferol appeared to be ineffective, but in one, repeated courses of melphalan and corticosteroids over three years together with 1 alpha-hydroxycholecalciferol produced striking clinical and histological improvement. The findings in these and other patients strongly suggest that paraproteinaemia is an integral feature of fibrogenesis imperfecta ossium, and this needs further investigation.
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N A Athanasou, R Pandey, R de Steiger, D Crook, P M Smith (1995)  Diagnosis of infection by frozen section during revision arthroplasty.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 77: 1. 28-33 Jan  
Abstract: We assessed the efficacy of intraoperative frozen-section histology in detecting infection in failed arthroplasties in 106 hips and knees. We found inflammatory changes consistent with infection (an average of one or more neutrophil polymorphs or plasma cells per high-power field in several samples) in 18 cases; there was a significant growth on bacterial culture in 20 cases. Compared with the bacterial cultures, the frozen sections provided two false-negative results and three false-positive results (sensitivity, 90%; specificity, 96%; and accuracy, 95%). The positive predictive value was 88%, the negative value, 98%. These results support the inclusion of intra-operative frozen-section histology in any protocol for revision arthroplasty for loose components.
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R Smith, N A Athanasou, S J Ostlere, S E Vipond (1995)  Pregnancy-associated osteoporosis.   QJM 88: 12. 865-878 Dec  
Abstract: The clinical features, investigation and outcome in 24 patients with pregnancy-associated osteoporosis, followed for up to 24 years from the first pregnancy are described. Symptoms occurred most often in the first pregnancy (17 patients) at a mean age of 27 years (range 21-36); the most frequent was back pain in late pregnancy or post partum (n = 18); less common was hip (n = 5) or ankle (n = 1) pain. In most, symptoms improved soon after delivery. Four subjects had pre-existing disorders known to reduce bone density (corticosteroid therapy, heparin treatment, mild osteogenesis imperfecta and previous anorexia nervosa). Radiographs showed vertebral collapse or localized osteoporosis of the hip, with MRI evidence of oedema. Forearm bone mineral density (BMD) was sometimes normal, but spinal BMD (measured by DXA) was low. Bone biopsies in eleven patients showed features compatible with osteoblast failure. Except for the patient with mild osteogenesis imperfecta, cultured dermal fibroblasts synthesized and exported normal Type I collagen. In 14 subsequent pregnancies (10 patients) there was no recurrence in ten and mild symptoms in the remainder. Excluding one patient who had repeated osteoporotic fractures and vertebral collapse, the long-term prognosis was good.
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J H Bennett, S Shousha, B Puddle, N A Athanasou (1995)  Immunohistochemical identification of tumours of adipocytic differentiation using an antibody to aP2 protein.   J Clin Pathol 48: 10. 950-954 Oct  
Abstract: To determine whether aP2 expression is a useful diagnostic marker in soft tissue tumour pathology.
Notes:
J Loughlin, C Irven, N Athanasou, A Carr, B Sykes (1995)  Differential allelic expression of the type II collagen gene (COL2A1) in osteoarthritic cartilage.   Am J Hum Genet 56: 5. 1186-1193 May  
Abstract: Osteoarthritis (OA) is a common debilitating disease resulting from the degeneration of articular cartilage. The major protein of cartilage is type II collagen, which is encoded by the COL2A1 gene. Mutations at this locus have been discovered in several individuals with inherited disorders of cartilage. We have identified 27 primary OA patients who are heterozygous for sequence dimorphisms located in the coding region of COL2A1. These dimorphisms were used to distinguish the mRNA output from each of the two COL2A1 alleles in articular cartilage obtained from each patient. Three patients demonstrated differential allelic expression and produced < 12% of the normal level of mRNA from one of their COL2A1 alleles. The same allele shows reduced expression in all three patients, and this allele is more frequent in a well-defined OA population than in a control group, suggesting the possible existence of a rare COL2A1 allele that predisposes to OA.
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1994
J M Quinn, J O McGee, N A Athanasou (1994)  Cellular and hormonal factors influencing monocyte differentiation to osteoclastic bone-resorbing cells.   Endocrinology 134: 6. 2416-2423 Jun  
Abstract: Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells which form by fusion of circulating mononuclear hemopoietic precursors. The nature of these precursor cells and the roles bone stromal cells and hormonal factors play in their differentiation to osteoclasts are unknown. We cocultured adherent murine blood monocytes (nonspecific esterase and F4/80 positive; tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase negative) with osteoblastic and fibroblastic stromal cell lines in the presence of 2 x 10(-8) M 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25-(OH)2D3]. Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase and calcitonin (CT) receptor-positive osteoclastic cells, which formed numerous resorption pits in vitro, were noted after only 4 days in coculture with UMR106 osteoblast-like cells. Resorption was seen in cocultures to which as few as 100 peripheral blood mononuclear cells had been added. 1,25-(OH)2D3 and contact with live bone stromal cells were absolute requirements for monocyte differentiation into bone-resorbing cells. Both salmon CT (5 IU/ml) and prostaglandin E2 (10(-6) M) significantly inhibited bone resorption. Thus, a significant proportion of the peripheral blood mononuclear cells in the monocyte fraction are capable of differentiating into cells showing the cytochemical and functional characteristics of osteoclasts. The presence of specific hormonal [1,25-(OH)2D3] and bone stromal cell elements is necessary for this process to occur; the resultant resorption can be modulated by known inhibitors of bone resorption, CT and prostaglandin E2.
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B M Richard, M Thyveetil, H Sharif, N A Athanasou (1994)  Ameloblastoma with stromal multinucleated giant cells.   Histopathology 25: 5. 497-499 Nov  
Abstract: We report a case of ameloblastoma which uniquely showed heavy osteoclast-like giant cell accumulation and woven bone formation in the surrounding fibrous stroma. Immunohistochemistry showed that the giant cells were non-epithelial in origin and suggested that stromal factors (i.e., the presence or absence of mineralized bone) determines whether these cells express an osteoclastic antigenic phenotype.
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J M Quinn, Y Matsumura, D Tarin, J O McGee, N A Athanasou (1994)  Cellular and hormonal mechanisms associated with malignant bone resorption.   Lab Invest 71: 4. 465-471 Oct  
Abstract: To obtain a better understanding of the cellular and hormonal mechanisms responsible for the malignant bone resorption associated with metastatic carcinoma, we sought to identify whether tumor cells or tumor infiltrating macrophages were capable of lacunar bone resorption.
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N A Athanasou, M K Benson, B P Brenton, R Smith (1994)  Progressive osseous heteroplasia: a case report.   Bone 15: 5. 471-475 Sep/Oct  
Abstract: We report the case of a young female who, from infancy, suffered extensive, progressive, heterotopic ossification of her left lower limb. Heterotopic ossification, which was largely but not exclusively intramembranous in type, was most marked in subcutaneous fat but was also noted in muscle and deep connective tissue. The spectrum of changes noted suggests that this congenital disorder of soft tissues is similar to that recently described as progressive osseous heteroplasia.
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1993
N A Athanasou, C Barbatis (1993)  Erdheim-Chester disease with epiphyseal and systemic disease.   J Clin Pathol 46: 5. 481-482 May  
Abstract: A case of Erdheim-Chester disease which affected the epiphysis and showed evidence of systemic disease is presented. Clinical and histopathological similarities with other forms of disseminated Langerhans' cell histiocytosis are noted, particularly reaction of infiltrating histiocytes for S100 and HLA-DR.
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D C Ayers, N A Athanasou, C G Woods, R B Duthie (1993)  Dialysis arthropathy of the hip.   Clin Orthop Relat Res 290. 216-224 May  
Abstract: Beta 2-microglobulin amyloid deposition is associated with a destructive arthropathy in the hip of chronic hemodialysis patients. Twenty-five hips from 18 patients were assessed for the presence and immunohistochemical type of amyloid. The hemodialysis group was compared with an age- and disease-matched control group that had no evidence of renal failure. Beta 2-microglobulin amyloid deposits were present in all patients who had been on hemodialysis for 18 months or more. Beta 2-microglobulin amyloid deposits were not found in patients who had been on hemodialysis for less than 18 months. Amyloid deposits were seen first in the articular cartilage and later involved the synovial membrane, joint capsule, and subchondral bone as well. The presence and amount of amyloid deposition correlated to the duration of hemodialysis. Severely affected hip roentgenographically had a concentric loss of joint space, periarticular erosions, and cystic lesions in the femoral head and acetabulum. These pathologic and roentgenographic changes suggest that amyloid deposition leads directly to the erosive hip arthropathy occurring in hemodialysis patients.
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A Carano, P H Schlesinger, N A Athanasou, S L Teitelbaum, H C Blair (1993)  Acid and base effects on avian osteoclast activity.   Am J Physiol 264: 3 Pt 1. C694-C701 Mar  
Abstract: Osteoclasts generate a massive acid flux to mobilize bone calcium. Local extracellular acidification by polarized vacuolar-type H(+)-ATPase, balanced by contralateral HCO3-(-)Cl- exchange to maintain physiological intracellular pH, is theorized to drive this process. It follows that extracellular pH, PCO2, or HCO3- concentration ([HCO3-]) should impact bone matrix dissolution. However, the effects on bone resorption of the concentrations of these ions or their transmembrane gradients are unknown. Furthermore, because bone management is a vital process, regulatory feedback may minimize such effects. Thus a complex relationship between bone resorption and pH, PCO2, and [HCO3-] is expected but requires experimental determination. We measured bone resorption by isolated avian osteoclasts while varying these parameters across the physiological range. Bone degradation increased 50% from pH 7.3 to 6.7, whether achieved by changing [HCO3-] (2.3-38 mM) at constant HCO3- or PCO2 (15-190 mmHg) at constant [HCO3-]. However, at constant pH, changing PCO2 and [HCO3-] within physiological limits did not affect bone resorption. In contrast, total HCO3- removal at pH 7.4 reduced bone degradation by rat or avian osteoclasts substantially, confirming that normal acid secretion requires HCO3-. These observations support a model coupling osteoclastic bone resorption to proton and HCO3- transport but indicate that [HCO3-] is not rate limiting under physiological conditions. Extracellular pH changes affect osteoclastic bone resorption measurably, but not dramatically, at physiological [HCO3-].
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N Athanasou (1993)  Tumor infiltrating macrophages and metastasis-associated osteolysis (review).   Int J Oncol 2: 2. 261-263 Feb  
Abstract: Recent studies have focussed on the role of tumour infiltrating macrophages (TIMs) in the osteolysis associated with bone metastasis. TIMs indirectly promote pathological bone resorption by releasing local factors that stimulate host osteoclast activity. TIMs alone can also directly resorb bone in low grade fashion. Moreover, in the presence of stromal cells and 1,25 dihydroxyvitamin D3, TIMs differentiate into osteoclast-like cells that are capable of extensive, high-grade lacunar bone resorption. These two patterns of TIM-mediated osteolysis could account for differences in the rate of pathological bone resorption after the metastasis is established, and point to a central role for TIMs in effecting tumor osteolysis.
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1992
N A Athanasou, B Sallie (1992)  Localized deposition of amyloid in articular cartilage.   Histopathology 20: 1. 41-46 Jan  
Abstract: The frequency, nature and tissue distribution of localized amyloid deposits in articular cartilage of young and elderly patients, with and without evidence of arthritic disease, was determined. Localized amyloid deposits in articular cartilage were not found in young patients with osteoarthritis of the hip or chondromalacia/osteoarthritis of the patella. However, in elderly patients with osteoarthritis of the hip, amyloid deposits were commonly found, although at no greater frequency than in elderly patients with no evidence of arthritis. Amyloid deposits were commonly present (in 95% of cases) in osteoarthritis of the knee joint and in the articular cartilage of all joints containing pyrophosphate deposits. Similar deposits of amyloid were also found in the articular cartilage of 40-45% of rheumatoid joints. These findings indicate that localized amyloid deposits in the articular cartilage are largely age-related and not due to specific pathological alterations affecting articular cartilage.
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H R Dalton, T Featherstone, N Athanasou (1992)  Organ limited amyloidosis with lymphadenopathy.   Postgrad Med J 68: 795. 47-50 Jan  
Abstract: Hilar and mediastinal lymphadenopathy associated with localized pulmonary amyloid is very rare. We describe two cases of this unusual combination, one of endobronchial amyloid with adenopathy and the other of nodular parenchymal amyloid with hilar nodes. In both these cases the nodes contained calcification, and in the nodular parenchymal case in particular, this appearance is highly suggestive of pulmonary amyloid.
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N A Athanasou, J M Quinn (1992)  Bone resorption by macrophage polykaryons of a pilar tumor of scalp.   Cancer 70: 2. 469-475 Jul  
Abstract: The nature of keratin-associated giant cells of a pilar tumor of scalp (PTS) was assessed for several osteoclast-like characteristics, including antigenic phenotype, ultrastructure, calcitonin response, and bone resorbing ability. The giant cells, unlike osteoclasts, did not respond morphologically to calcitonin, had the antigenic phenotype of cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineage, and showed ultrastructural features of macrophage polykaryons. However, like osteoclasts, the giant cells were capable of bone resorption, including resorption pit formation. This indicates that the giant cells in PTS are of histiocytic and not osteoclastic differentiation. Bone resorption by tumor-associated macrophage polykaryons shows that this is not a unique defining characteristic of osteoclasts. It also suggests that such histiocytic cells may contribute to the osteolysis associated with skeletal metastases of squamous and other carcinomas.
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C J Joyner, J M Quinn, J T Triffitt, M E Owen, N A Athanasou (1992)  Phenotypic characterisation of mononuclear and multinucleated cells of giant cell tumour of bone.   Bone Miner 16: 1. 37-48 Jan  
Abstract: Studies were carried out on 3 giant cell tumours of bone (GCTB) to characterise further the cells forming the distinctive mononuclear and multinucleated components. Samples of tumours were grown as explants in vitro and implanted subcutaneously in athymic mice. Cells were characterised in terms of their cell morphology and cytochemical, antigenic and functional phenotype. In culture, giant cells formed a non-proliferative, relatively homogeneous population of cells which expressed features characteristic of the osteoclast phenotype. The mononuclear cell component was heterogeneous and included macrophage-like cells, which persisted for a short time in culture, and fibroblast-like cells which proliferated. In subcutaneous implants, the fibroblast-like cells formed a tissue which included areas of bone formation associated with regions of alkaline phosphatase activity. These observations are consistent with earlier suggestions that the neoplastic component in GCTB consists of a mononuclear stromal cell which elicits a macrophage/osteoclast response.
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J S Chang, J M Quinn, A Demaziere, C J Bulstrode, M J Francis, R B Duthie, N A Athanasou (1992)  Bone resorption by cells isolated from rheumatoid synovium.   Ann Rheum Dis 51: 11. 1223-1229 Nov  
Abstract: Cellular mechanisms accounting for the osteolysis of rheumatoid erosions are poorly understood. Cells were isolated and characterised from the synovium of 16 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and four patients with osteoarthritis and their ability to resorb bone was assessed using a scanning electron microscope bone resorption assay. Macrophages were the major cell type isolated from the synovium of patients with RA. These produced extensive roughening of the bone surface without resorption pit formation. This low grade type of bone resorption was not affected by systemic (calcitonin, parathyroid hormone, 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) or local (interleukin 1, prostaglandin E2) factors influencing bone resorption. Macrophage mediated bone resorption differs qualitatively and quantitatively from that of osteoclasts but is likely to play an important part in the development of marginal erosions in RA.
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J Quinn, C Joyner, J T Triffitt, N A Athanasou (1992)  Polymethylmethacrylate-induced inflammatory macrophages resorb bone.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 74: 5. 652-658 Sep  
Abstract: Macrophages and their fused products are commonly found at the polymethylmethacrylate cement-bone interface, but it is not known if they contribute directly to the osteolysis associated with loosening of the cemented prosthesis. We isolated mononuclear phagocytes from granulomas formed by subcutaneous implantation of polymethylmethacrylate into mice and incubated them on bone slices in which they formed resorption lacunae after co-culture for seven to 14 days with both marrow stromal cells and osteoblast-like cells (in the presence of 1 alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 and dexamethasone). Increased numbers of tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase-positive mononuclear and multinucleated cells formed in these cultures. Both in the presence and absence of stromal cells, macrophages produced extensive superficial roughening of the bone surface. Polymethylmethacrylate-induced macrophages are thus capable of low-grade surface and high-grade lacunar osteolysis, the latter requiring the presence of specific hormonal and stromal cell elements. These two forms of bone resorption could account for the pathogenesis and clinical patterns associated with loosening of the cemented prosthesis.
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A Demaziere, N A Athanasou (1992)  Adhesion receptors of intimal and subintimal cells of the normal synovial membrane.   J Pathol 168: 2. 209-215 Oct  
Abstract: The distribution of cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) and matrix proteins in the normal synovium of four subjects was studied by immunohistology in order to determine the factors governing the cellular and tissue organization of the intimal and subintimal compartments. Basement membrane proteins, laminin, and collagen type IV, as well as vitronectin and fibronectin, were identified in the intima and there was corresponding expression of integrin and non-integrin receptors (e.g., CD29, CD49b, CD49d, CD49e, CD49f, CD51, CD61, CD44) for these matrix proteins. There were notable differences in CAM expression between intimal, subintimal, and vascular compartments of the synovial membrane. Phenotypic heterogeneity for CAMs involved in cell-cell interactions, particularly CD11a, CD11b, ICAM-1, and HLA-DR, was also present. The range of CAMs expressed by synovial and endothelial cells not only indicates a structural role for these antigens, but also suggests that they may control leucocyte traffic into the membrane, including recruitment of cells into the synovial lining.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn, C J Bulstrode (1992)  Resorption of bone by inflammatory cells derived from the joint capsule of hip arthroplasties.   J Bone Joint Surg Br 74: 1. 57-62 Jan  
Abstract: The role of inflammatory cells in aseptic loosening and failure of cemented joint replacements is unclear. Inflammatory cells from the revision joint capsule of four failed hip arthroplasties were examined to determine their nature and resorptive capacity. The capsules contained numerous macrophages and abundant foreign-body macrophage polykaryons, distinguished from osteoclasts by their antigenic phenotype and lack of response to calcitonin. When cultured on cortical bone slices in vitro, both macrophages and macrophage polykaryons produced small resorption pits and were associated with areas of superficial resorption of the bone surface. These results indicate that foreign-body induced macrophages and macrophage polykaryons are capable of a type of low-grade bone resorption which may be of pathogenic significance in the loosening of cemented joint prosthetic components.
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P D Latham, N A Athanasou, C G Woods (1992)  Fibrous dysplasia with locally aggressive malignant change.   Arch Orthop Trauma Surg 111: 3. 183-186  
Abstract: This is a case report of a tumour which showed all the histological features of fibrous dysplasia without any features of high-grade malignancy, yet had become locally aggressive, causing cortical erosion and extension into soft tissue. Fibrous dysplasia is a well-recognised entity that encompasses monostotic lesions, polyostotic involvement and Albright's syndrome [6, 8]. Lesions in bone usually spare the epiphysis before puberty, but often involve the epiphyseal area after maturity and can progress during adult life [3]. Unless cystic [6, 10] or malignant change [7, 10, 11] occurs, fibrous dysplasia usually remains contained within bone.
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J M Quinn, N A Athanasou (1992)  Tumour infiltrating macrophages are capable of bone resorption.   J Cell Sci 101 ( Pt 3): 681-686 Mar  
Abstract: The cell types responsible for osteolysis associated with skeletal metastasis of solid malignancies are unclear. Tumour infiltrating macrophages (TIMs) isolated from primary mammary carcinomas of C3H/Avy mice were cultured on bone slices to assess their ability to resorb bone. After 14 days in co-culture with murine marrow stromal cell line ST2 and added 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 and dexamethasone, TIMs showed increased tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity and formed numerous lacunar resorption pits. In the absence of ST2 cells, TIMs did not form lacunar resorption pits but produced roughening of the bone surface with exposure of mineralized collagen fibres. Normal alveolar macrophages, in both the presence and absence of ST2 cells similarly produced only surface resorption. TIMs are thus capable of both low-grade (surface) and high-grade (lacunar) pathological bone resorption, a specific interaction with stromal cells being necessary for the latter to occur. TIM-mediated bone resorption could account for different clinical and pathological patterns of tumour osteolysis.
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J I Alvarez, F P Ross, N A Athanasou, H C Blair, E M Greenfield, S L Teitelbaum (1992)  Osteoclast precursors circulate in avian blood.   Calcif Tissue Int 51: 1. 48-53 Jul  
Abstract: The osteoclast is known to be derived from a marrow-residing precursor that is a member of the mononuclear phagocyte family, but the means by which this cell moves from marrow to bone is unknown. We herein demonstrate that mononuclear progenitors capable of differentiating, in vitro, into cells exhibiting the osteoclast phenotype circulate in chickens. The mononuclear fraction was isolated on a density gradient from blood drawn from calcium-deprived laying hens and the plastic-adherent population was obtained. These cells are members of the mononuclear phagocyte family, as demonstrated by nonspecific esterase and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) activities, expression of the macrophage-specific mannose receptor, and their ability to phagocytose latex particles. When cultured in the presence of devitalized bone, these cells undergo progressive multinucleation and ultimately become essentially indistinguishable from isolated osteoclasts and those generated from bone marrow precursors. Specifically, the blood-derived polykaryons are TRAP-positive, exhibit characteristic ruffled membranes, and express the osteoclast antigens 121F and 23C6. When placed on bone slices, these cells form typical resorptive "pits." Moreover, when cultured with 3H-proline-labeled bone, the blood monocyte-generated osteoclasts mobilize matrix as effectively as those derived from marrow. Thus, osteoclast precursors circulate in the blood of laying hens and can be induced to differentiate in vitro.
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S S Apte, N A Athanasou (1992)  An immunohistological study of cartilage and synovium in primary synovial chondromatosis.   J Pathol 166: 3. 277-281 Mar  
Abstract: The antigenic phenotype of cartilage and synovial cells from six cases of primary synovial chondromatosis (PSC) was determined. This was compared with profiles similarly obtained for adult and fetal cartilage cells. The Ki-67 (proliferation-associated) antigen was present on 40-50 per cent of chondrocytes in the proliferative zone of fetal epiphyseal cartilage but absent in chondrocytes of adult articular cartilage and PSC cartilage nodules. The absence of Ki-67 antigen suggests that there were no proliferating cells in the synovium or cartilage in these cases of PSC. In PSC alone, some chondrocytes in the cartilage nodules and mononuclear subintimal cells around the nodules also reacted for CD68, suggesting that growth of the cartilage nodules may occur by a metaplastic process. All synoviocytes in PSC were positive for leucocyte common antigen, HLA-DR, and CD68, a pattern typical of reactive rather than normal synovium.
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A Demazière, R Leek, N A Athanasou (1992)  Histological distribution of the interleukin-4 receptor (IL4R) within the normal and pathological synovium.   Rev Rhum Mal Osteoartic 59: 3. 219-224 Mar  
Abstract: The authors sought the synovial distribution of the interleukin-4 receptor in the synovium of 3 normal subjects, 5 cases of osteoarthritis (OA) and 10 cases of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and various other inflammatory arthritic conditions. The specific receptor for interleukin-4 was mainly found on cells around subintimal blood vessels and within lymphocytic aggregates where dendritic-like cells were strongly stained. Conversely, synovial lining cells did not express the interleukin-4 receptor. In conclusion, it is believed that the expression of interleukin-4 receptor is restricted to the early activation stage of the mononuclear cells in the pathological joint.
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I A Doussis, B Puddle, N A Athanasou (1992)  Immunophenotype of multinucleated and mononuclear cells in giant cell lesions of bone and soft tissue.   J Clin Pathol 45: 5. 398-404 May  
Abstract: To compare the antigenic phenotype of giant cells in giant cell lesions of bone and soft tissue with that of osteoclasts and macrophage polykaryons.
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N A Athanasou, J I Alvarez, F P Ross, J M Quinn, S L Teitelbaum (1992)  Species differences in the immunophenotype of osteoclasts and mononuclear phagocytes.   Calcif Tissue Int 50: 5. 427-432 May  
Abstract: Human osteoclasts, in contrast to mononuclear phagocytes, are known to express a well-defined restricted range of myeloid antigens. To determine whether these antigenic differences are present in other species, we examined the immunophenotype of chicken and rabbit osteoclasts, macrophages, macrophage polykaryons, and monocytes and compared them with similarly derived and cultured human cells. Human, rabbit, and avian osteoclasts reacted with monoclonal antibodies against human beta 1 integrins (CD29, CD49b, CD49d), beta 3 integrins (CD51, CD61), as well as human macrophage-associated antigen CD68. Avian osteoclasts also reacted for CD11a/18 and CD14 which are not present on human osteoclasts. Avian and mammalian monocytes, macrophages, and macrophage polykaryons expressed all the above antigens. Both avian and human macrophage polykaryons produced by culture of peritoneal macrophages reacted with anti-CD51 antibodies indicating that expression of the vitronectin receptor alone does not distinguish between these cells in vitro.
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N A Athanasou, J M Quinn (1992)  Human tumour-associated macrophages are capable of bone resorption.   Br J Cancer 65: 4. 523-526 Apr  
Abstract: Cellular mechanisms of bone resorption associated with skeletal metastasis are poorly understood. Human tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) isolated from primary lung carcinomas were incubated on bone slices where they formed resorption lacunae after 14 days co-culture with a mouse marrow-derived stromal cell line (ST2) with added 1 alpha, 25-dihydroxy Vitamin D3 and dexamethasone. These co-cultures were associated with the formation of increased numbers of tartrate resistant acid phosphatase positive mononuclear and multinucleated cells. Similar cocultures of ST2 cells with normal alveolar macrophages did not result in lacunar resorption. Both in the presence and absence of ST2 cells, TAMs and normal alveolar macrophages produced roughening of the bone surface with exposure of mineralised collagen fibres. TAMs are capable of both low-grade surface resorption and high-grade lacunar resorption of bone, and a specific interaction with stromal cells is necessary for the latter to occur. TAMs may thus directly contribute to the bone resorption associated with skeletal metastasis.
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1991
N A Athanasou, D Ayers, A J Rainey, D O Oliver, R B Duthie (1991)  Joint and systemic distribution of dialysis amyloid.   Q J Med 78: 287. 205-214 Mar  
Abstract: Deposition of beta 2-microglobulin amyloid in the joints of dialysis patients is common and begins early in the course of treatment, but its pathogenic significance in the production of dialysis arthropathy is uncertain. The joints (hip, knee, shoulder, elbow, wrist, cervical and lumbar spine, sacroiliac joint) and systemic tissues of 19 autopsied patients who had undergone haemodialysis for between 6 and 231 months were examined histopathologically for the presence of beta 2-microglobulin amyloid; it was present in all joints examined, including those unassociated with radiological changes and those of patients who had been on haemodialysis alone for only 24 months. Osteoarticular beta 2-microglobulin amyloid deposits were also found in patients who had been treated mainly by continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis. Systemic amyloid deposition was only seen in patients who had been haemodialysed for more than 13 years and consisted of sparse tiny deposits in blood vessel walls.
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J M Quinn, N A Athanasou, J O McGee (1991)  Extracellular matrix receptor and platelet antigens on osteoclasts and foreign body giant cells.   Histochemistry 96: 2. 169-176  
Abstract: Osteoclasts (OCs) and other cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system possess receptors for adhesive proteins present in the extracellular matrix. The antigenic phenotype of OCs and foreign body giant cells (FBGCs) was investigated for the presence of several integrin molecules and other largely platelet-associated antigens involved in cell adhesion reactions. Both OCs and FBGCs expressed the alpha-chains of the vitronectin receptor (CD51) and of the VLA-2 (CDw49b) and VLA-4 (CDw49d) molecules as well as their respective beta-chains, gpIIIa (CD61) and CD29. OCs and FBGCs also expressed CD9 and CD55 (DAF-Decay Accelerating Factor) and strongly reacted with antibodies directed against fibrinogen, fibronectin and vitronectin; the latter are ligands for several of the above matrix protein receptors. The data suggest that cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions involving adhesive proteins may be important in OC and FBGC function.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn, D J Ferguson, J O McGee (1991)  Bone resorption by macrophage polykaryons of giant cell tumour of tendon sheath.   Br J Cancer 63: 4. 527-533 Apr  
Abstract: The antigenic phenotype, ultrastructure and bone resorbing ability of mononuclear and multinucleated giant cells of four giant cell tumour of tendon sheath (GCTTS) lesions was assessed. Both the giant cells and the mononuclear cells exhibited the antigenic phenotype of cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineage. The giant cells, unlike osteoclasts, did not respond morphologically to calcitonin and showed ultrastructural and immunophenotypic features of macrophage polykaryons. However, like osteoclasts, the giant cells showed direct evidence of resorption pit formation on bone slices. This indicates that the GCTTS is composed of cells of histiocytic differentiation with the giant and mononuclear cell components expressing a similar antigenic phenotype. Bone resorption by macrophage polykaryons shows that this is not a unique defining characteristic of osteoclasts. Qualitative differences in the degree and pattern of bone resorption by macrophage polykaryons distinguish it from that of osteoclasts and may underlie the clinical behaviour of osteolytic lesions.
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P D Latham, N A Athanasou (1991)  Intraosseous lipoma within the femoral head. A case report.   Clin Orthop Relat Res 265. 228-232 Apr  
Abstract: Intraosseous lipoma occurring within the femoral head seems not to have been previously reported. Symptoms associated with the tumor included slowly increasing pain and a cystic lesion shown on roentgenograms. Management was by total hip arthroplasty. Pathologic examination of the specimen showed that the tumor was composed almost entirely of mature adipose tissue in keeping with a diagnosis of Stage 1 intraosseous lipoma. A sclerotic border and osteoid seams were noted, two features that seem not to have been previously reported in early lesions. Recent papers suggest intraosseous lipomas are more common than previously thought, and the femur now accounts for 25% of reported cases.
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J I Alvarez, S L Teitelbaum, H C Blair, E M Greenfield, N A Athanasou, F P Ross (1991)  Generation of avian cells resembling osteoclasts from mononuclear phagocytes.   Endocrinology 128: 5. 2324-2335 May  
Abstract: Several lines of indirect evidence suggest that a monocyte family precursor gives rise to the osteoclast, although this hypothesis is controversial. Starting with a uniform population of nonspecific esterase positive, tartrate-sensitive, acid phosphatase-producing, mannose receptor-bearing mononuclear cells, prepared from dispersed marrow of calcium-deprived laying hens by cell density separation and selective cellular adherence, we generated multinucleated cells in vitro. When cultured with devitalized bone, these cells show, by electron microscopy, the characteristic osteoclast morphology in that they are mitochondria-rich, multinucleated, and, most importantly, develop characteristic ruffled membranes at the matrix attachment site. Moreover, as documented by scanning electron microscopy, these cells pit bone slices in a manner identical to freshly isolated osteoclasts. In addition, isoenzymes of acid phosphatase from generated osteoclasts, separated by 7.5% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at pH 4, are identical to those of mature osteoclasts in migration pattern and tartrate resistance, although the precursor cells from which the osteoclasts are generated produce an entirely different isoenzyme, which is tartrate-sensitive and migrates less rapidly at pH 4. The fused cells also exhibit a cAMP response to prostaglandin E2. Therefore, osteoclast-like cells can be derived by in vitro culture of a marrow-derived monocyte cell population.
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N A Athanasou, B Puddle, J Quinn, C G Woods (1991)  Use of monoclonal antibodies to recognise osteoclasts in routinely processed bone biopsy specimens.   J Clin Pathol 44: 8. 664-666 Aug  
Abstract: In decalcified (5% nitric acid) and undecalcified (glycol-methacrylate or resin embedded) routinely processed bone specimens osteoclasts against resorbing surfaces were identified with monoclonal antibodies directed against leucocyte common antigen (LCA) (PD7/26, 2B11), CD68 (KP1), and gpIIIa (Y2/51) but not against HLA-DR (CR3/43 and Ta11B5). Mononuclear cells on resorbing surfaces and occasional mononuclear cells against or near resting surfaces showed a similar pattern of reactivity. This study shows that immunohistochemistry is a sensitive and useful technique for identifying osteoclasts in routinely processed bone specimens. It also suggests a role for mononuclear cells (possibly pre-osteoclasts) in bone resorption.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn (1991)  Immunocytochemical analysis of human synovial lining cells: phenotypic relation to other marrow derived cells.   Ann Rheum Dis 50: 5. 311-315 May  
Abstract: The antigenic phenotype of human synovial lining cells in normal and hyperplastic synovium intima was determined with a panel of monoclonal antibodies directed against a large number of well defined myeloid (macrophage/granulocyte associated) antigens. Synovial lining cells express numerous macrophage associated antigens, including CD11b (CR3), CD13, CD14, CD16 (FcRIII), CD18, CD32 (FcRII), CD45 (leucocyte common antigen), CD54 (ICAM-1), CD64 (FcRI), CD68, and CD71 (transferrin receptor). Few synovial lining cells expressed CD11a (LFA-1) and CD11c (p150,95). Subintimal macrophages expressed all the macrophage associated antigens which were present on synovial lining cells and, in addition, expressed CD15a, CD25 (interleukin-2 receptor), CD34, and CD35 (C3b receptor), none of which was present on synovial lining cells. Synovial lining cell expression of a wide range of macrophage antigens argues in favour of their marrow origin and membership of the mononuclear phagocyte system.
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N A Athanasou, M Caughey, P Burge, C G Woods (1991)  Deposition of calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystals in a soft tissue chondroma.   Ann Rheum Dis 50: 12. 950-952 Dec  
Abstract: Calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate (CPPD) crystal deposits were found in an extraarticular chondroma of the soft parts overlying the distal phalanx of the right middle finger. The lesion appeared to arise from the flexor tenosynovium. The pathogenesis of soft tissue chondroma and the relation of cartilage metaplasia to the process of CPPD crystal deposition were investigated.
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1990
N A Athanasou, J Quinn, M A Horton, J O McGee (1990)  New sites of cellular vitronectin receptor immunoreactivity detected with osteoclast-reacting monoclonal antibodies 13C2 and 23C6.   Bone Miner 8: 1. 7-22 Jan  
Abstract: The immunohistochemical profile of osteoclast-reacting monoclonal antibodies, 13C2 and 23C6, known to detect the alpha-chain of the vitronectin receptor, is described. Both antibodies reacted with several cell types apart from osteoclasts including megakaryocytes, smooth muscle cells, endothelial cells, thyroid follicular epithelium, renal glomeruli and tubular epithelium, myoepithelial and epithelial cells in the breast and prostate, and both cytotrophoblast and syncytiotrophoblast. In addition, macrophage polykaryons, synovial lining cells, a small number of mononuclear cells in buffy coats, and a few macrophage-like cells in the stroma of various tissues were also stained. The epitopes recognized by these antibodies are thus not osteoclast-specific and are present on other cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system. The implications of these results for osteoclast ontogeny, the nature of the antigens described and the question of osteoclast-specific antibodies are discussed.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn, M K Brenner, H G Prentice, A Graham, S Taylor, D Flannery, J O McGee (1990)  Origin of marrow stromal cells and haemopoietic chimaerism following bone marrow transplantation determined by in situ hybridisation.   Br J Cancer 61: 3. 385-389 Mar  
Abstract: The origin and cell lineage of stromal cells in the bone marrow is uncertain. Whether a common stem cell exists for both haemopoietic and stromal cells or whether these cell lines arise from distinct stem cells is unknown. Using in situ hybridisation for detection of the Y chromosome, we have examined histological sections of bone marrow from seven patients who received marrow transplants from HLA-matched donors of the opposite sex. Stromal cells (adipocytes, fibroblasts, endothelial cells, osteoblasts and osteocytes) were identified in these recipients as being of host origin. This result is consistent with the concept of a distinct origin and separate cell lineage for cells of the haemopoietic and stromal systems. It also shows that engraftment of marrow stromal cell precursors does not occur and that host stromal cells survive conditioning regimens for marrow transplantation. With the exception of one case, with a markedly hypocellular marrow, mixed chimaerism was seen in haemopoietic cells, indicating that this is not a rare event after marrow transplantation.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn (1990)  Immunophenotypic differences between osteoclasts and macrophage polykaryons: immunohistological distinction and implications for osteoclast ontogeny and function.   J Clin Pathol 43: 12. 997-1003 Dec  
Abstract: The antigenic phenotype of human fetal osteoclasts was compared with that of human tissue macrophages and macrophage polykaryons in foreign body lesions using a large number of monoclonal antibodies directed against myeloid (granulocyte/mononuclear phagocyte) antigens. Osteoclasts expressed a restricted range of macrophage-associated antigens including CD13, CD15A, CD44, CD45, CD54, (ICAM-1), CD71 (transferrin receptor), and CD68. These antigens were also present on macrophages and macrophage polykaryons both of which also strongly expressed CD11a,b,c, CD18, (LFA family), CD14, CD31, CD36, CD37, CD39 and CD43 antigens. There was also weak and occasional expression of CD16 (FcRIII), CD25 (interleukin 2 receptor), CD32 (FcRII), CD35 (C3b receptor) and HLA-DR by macrophage polykaryons. The presence of some macrophage associated antigens on osteoclasts is consistent with their originating from cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system. The numerous differences in antigenic phenotype between osteoclasts and macrophage polykaryons, however, suggest that their pathways of development and differentiation are not identical. The differences discerned in antigenic phenotype should also permit distinction between these polykaryons (and possibly their mononuclear precursors) in normal and diseased tissues.
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N A Athanasou, A J Chaplin, D O Oliver (1990)  Subcutaneous deposition of beta 2-microglobulin amyloid in a long-term haemodialysis patient.   Nephrol Dial Transplant 5: 10. 878-881  
Abstract: Subcutaneous deposition of beta 2-microglobulin (beta 2-M) amyloid is an uncommon finding in uraemic patients on long-term haemodialysis. A 60-year-old female on haemodialysis for 16 years developed a subcutaneous haematoma 2 years prior to death. At necropsy the lesion contained numerous deposits of beta 2-M amyloid as well as evidence of old haemorrhage, fibrous repair, dystrophic calcification and calcium oxalate crystal deposition. Highly sulphated glycosaminoglycans were present in the amyloid deposits. beta 2-M amyloid deposits were also present in the hip joint, cervical and lumbar spine, and in small blood vessels of the heart, liver, and lung. The possible role of trauma and tissue glycosaminoglycans changes in the formation of subcutaneous amyloid tumours is discussed.
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1989
N A Athanasou, C A Wells, J Quinn, D P Ferguson, A Heryet, J O McGee (1989)  The origin and nature of stromal osteoclast-like multinucleated giant cells in breast carcinoma: implications for tumour osteolysis and macrophage biology.   Br J Cancer 59: 4. 491-498 Apr  
Abstract: The origin and nature of osteoclast-like multinucleated giant cells (OMGCs), in extraskeletal neoplasms, is uncertain. The ultrastructure, antigenic phenotype and function of OMGCsm in a breast carcinoma were studied in order to clarify the relationship between OMGCs, osteoclasts and other cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system (MPS). OMGCs resorbed cortical bone in a manner similar to osteoclasts. However, unlike osteoclasts, OMGCs did not possess a ruffled border or clear zone, and expressed HLA-DR and Fc receptors and CD14, CD16, CD18 and CD11 (p150,95) antigens. In addition, OMGCs failed to respond morphologically to calcitonin and were directly stimulated by parathyroid hormone (PTH) to increase bone resorption. These findings suggest that OMGCs are a specific type of macrophage polykaryon distinct from both osteoclasts and other types of inflammatory polykaryon. Occasional smaller (20-25 microns) macrophage-like cells were also associated with resorption pits. Bone resorption by OMGCs isolated from the breast indicates that a cell of the MPS can be transplanted to a new tissue location and perform a highly specialised function appropriate to an MPS cell of that tissue (i.e. the osteoclast). PTH stimulation of bone resorption by OMGCs suggests that PTH or a PTH-like protein, may be involved in the bone resorption and consequent hypercalcaemia associated with metastatic breast cancer.
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1988
N A Athanasou, P A Hall, A J d'Ardenne, J Quinn, J O McGee (1988)  A monoclonal antibody (anti-L-35) which reacts with human osteoclasts and cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system.   Br J Exp Pathol 69: 2. 309-319 Apr  
Abstract: The immunohistochemical reactivity of a monoclonal antibody, anti-L-35, on a wide range of tissues is described. Anti-L-35 showed a high specificity for known and presumptive cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system including monocytes, sinus histiocytes, tangible body macrophages, interdigitating reticulum cells, Kupffer cells, alveolar macrophages, microglia, synoviocytes and Langerhans cells. Anti-L-35 also stained osteoclasts in fetal and adult bone including osteoclast-like giant cells of the giant-cell tumour of bone. Anti-L-35 did not react with any other cell type in the tissues screened apart from renal proximal tubular epithelium and megakaryocytes. This study has shown that L-35 is not restricted to activated T-cells, as previously reported, and provides further immunohistochemical evidence that monocytes, macrophages and osteoclasts contain common cellular antigens.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn, A Heryet, J O McGee (1988)  Localization of platelet antigens and fibrinogen on osteoclasts.   J Cell Sci 89 ( Pt 1): 115-122 Jan  
Abstract: The antigenic phenotype of the human osteoclast, which is known to be derived from a circulating mononuclear precursor cell of haemopoietic origin, is controversial. Recent studies have shown that macrophage as well as megakaryocyte/platelet antigens are expressed by osteoclasts. In this study, we have sought to define, by immunohistochemistry, the nature and possible function of platelet antigens expressed by human osteoclasts in foetal and adult bone specimens. Monoclonal antibodies to platelet glycoprotein IIIa (gpIIIa) and CD9 antibodies stained osteoclasts in all bone specimens examined. Fibrinogen was also localized to the osteoclast membrane in foetal bone imprints. In addition, we found that CD9 and gpIIIa antibodies reacted weakly with monocytes in buffy coat smears. Antibodies to factor 8 and glycoproteins Ib and IIb/IIIa did not react with osteoclasts. These results show that osteoclasts, monocytes, macrophages, megakaryocytes and platelets possess common antigens and that fibrinogen is present on the surface of osteoclasts. By analogy with platelets, CD9 and gpIIIa may play a role in fibrinogen binding by osteoclasts. Possible mechanisms by which platelet antigens and fibrinogen binding could affect osteoclast function are proposed.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn, C G Woods, J O Mcgee (1988)  Immunohistology of rheumatoid nodules and rheumatoid synovium.   Ann Rheum Dis 47: 5. 398-403 May  
Abstract: The immunohistological features of rheumatoid nodules and rheumatoid synovium were examined using monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies raised against macrophages, HLA-DR, leucocyte common antigen, and immunoglobulin components. The palisading cells surrounding the necrotic centre of the rheumatoid nodule were shown to be HLA-DR positive leucocytes, mostly histiocytes. The inflammatory infiltrate associated with rheumatoid nodules showed many immunohistochemical similarities to that of rheumatoid synovium, including a preponderance of IgG positive plasma cells, and a similar number and microanatomical pattern of distribution of HLA-DR positive cells. The significance of these findings for the cellular immunopathology and aetiology of the rheumatoid lesion is discussed.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn, J O McGee (1988)  Immunocytochemical analysis of the human osteoclast: phenotypic relationship to other marrow-derived cells.   Bone Miner 3: 4. 317-333 Mar  
Abstract: The immunocytochemistry of the osteoclast, which is known to be derived from a circulating mononuclear precursor cell of bone marrow origin, is controversial. In this study, we have determined the antigenic phenotype of human osteoclasts in fetal and adult (Paget's disease, giant cell tumour of bone) specimens using a large number of monoclonal antibodies which react with granulocytes and mononuclear phagocytes. We have identified antibodies which reacted with human osteoclasts including CD13, CD15 and several groups of anti-macrophage antibodies. All the antibodies which reacted with osteoclasts are also known to react with monocytes or macrophages. Other marrow elements such as granulocytes, megakaryocytes and platelets were also commonly stained. Expression of myeloid and platelet antigens on osteoclasts shows that they are phenotypically related to these cells and is in keeping with the origin of osteoclast precursors from the pluripotential haemopoietic stem cell. Only a proportion of osteoclasts in fetal bone preparations were stained by CD15 antibodies, suggesting that subsets or different populations of osteoclasts, which can be identified by monoclonal antibodies, may be present in bone.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn, A Heryet, B Puddle, C G Woods, J O McGee (1988)  The immunohistology of synovial lining cells in normal and inflamed synovium.   J Pathol 155: 2. 133-142 Jun  
Abstract: The immunohistology of synovial lining cells (SLCs) in normal and inflamed hyperplastic synovium was investigated using monoclonal antibodies directed against leucocyte common antigen (LCA) HLA-DR and other macrophage components. We found that some SLCs in normal synovium express LCA, HLA-DR, and monocyte/macrophage-associated antigens. The number of SLCs expressing these antigens is increased in hyperplastic osteoarthritic (OA) and rheumatoid (RA) synovium. Some SLCs which did not react for LCA or other macrophage markers but were positive for HLA-DR were also noted in normal synovium and some segments of hyperplastic OA synovium. SLCs which are positive for LCA, HLA-DR, and macrophage markers contribute to the intimal hyperplasia in RA where they account for the majority of SLCs in the synovial intima. In OA synovium, the distribution of SLCs showing this pattern of reactivity was less uniform with numerous SLCs which were positive for HLA-DR but negative for LCA and other macrophage markers also present in the synovial intima. These findings indicate that there are some SLCs of bone marrow origin in normal and hyperplastic synovium. They also suggest that recruitment of SLCs of marrow origin is important in the production of intimal hyperplasia in both RA and OA and that there is also a significant local proliferation of non-marrow derived SLCs in OA.
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1987
N A Athanasou, J Quinn, A Heryet, C G Woods, J O McGee (1987)  Effect of decalcification agents on immunoreactivity of cellular antigens.   J Clin Pathol 40: 8. 874-878 Aug  
Abstract: The effects of several strong acids, weak acids, a proprietary decalcifier, and edetic acid on the immunohistochemical staining of cryostat and fixed paraffin embedded sections of tissue from a variety of normal and pathological calcified and uncalcified specimens were studied. Even decalcification in strong acids (HCl, HN03, 5% trichloracetic acid, HCl-edetic acid did not diminish the reactivity of many useful antigens (including leucocyte common antigen, intermediate filaments, S100 protein and epithelial membrane antigen). Weaker acids (formic acid, acetic acid) and edetic acid decalcified more slowly and generally showed greater preservation of antigenic reactivity with better morphology and staining quality. Trichloracetic acid was also useful as a quick one step fixation and decalcifying agent for both cryostat and routinely processed sections. Knowledge of the preservation of antigenic reactivity in decalcified tissue will be useful in the diagnosis of tumours of uncertain histogenesis and origin which affect calcified tissues.
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N A Athanasou, J Quinn, J O McGee (1987)  Leucocyte common antigen is present on osteoclasts.   J Pathol 153: 2. 121-126 Oct  
Abstract: Using a large panel of monoclonal antibodies which recognize the leucocyte common antigen (LCA), the presence of LCA on osteoclasts in both fetal and adult human bone specimens has been determined by immunohistochemistry. LCA is evident on the surface of fetal human osteoclasts in bone imprints and cryostat sections. LCA was also found on osteoclasts in specimens of fixed, decalcified osteoarthritic bone. The intensity and pattern of osteoclast reactivity were similar to those of foreign-body type macrophage polykaryons in inflammatory lesions. These results favour derivation of osteoclasts and their precursors from the multipotential haemopoietic stem cell which produces peripheral blood leucocytes and argues against their origin from a separate stem cell.
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1986
N A Athanasou, A Heryet, J Quinn, K C Gatter, D Y Mason, J O McGee (1986)  Osteoclasts contain macrophage and megakaryocyte antigens.   J Pathol 150: 4. 239-246 Dec  
Abstract: The origin and mechanism of formation of the osteoclast remains controversial. Although it is known to be derived from a circulating mononuclear percursor, the identity of this cell is unknown. Using a panel of monoclonal antibodies raised against macrophage and other marrow-derived cells, we determined the immunocytochemical staining of human osteoclasts in both fetal bone metaphyseal imprints and frozen sections. Osteoclasts and marrow mononuclear cells were stained by three broad spectrum antimacrophage antibodies, EBM-11, Y182a and BM2. T310, an antibody which stains macrophages and T helper cells, and C17, an antimegakaryocyte antibody, also stained osteoclasts. EBM-11, Y182a and BM2 also stained megakaryocytes in bone imprints as well as normal bone marrow smears. The presence of macrophage-associated antigens in osteoclasts, megakaryocytes and bone marrow mononuclear cells indicates that they are phenotypically similar to macrophages.
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1985
N A Athanasou, E Bliss, K C Gatter, A Heryet, C G Woods, J O McGee (1985)  An immunohistological study of giant-cell tumour of bone: evidence for an osteoclast origin of the giant cells.   J Pathol 147: 3. 153-158 Nov  
Abstract: Using a panel of monoclonal antibodies against a variety of lymphoid and non-lymphoid antigens the immunohistological staining pattern of giant cells from a case of giant-cell tumour of bone has been compared with that of osteoclasts from the developing ends of fetal long bones. Only EBM-11, an antibody reacting with a wide spectrum of macrophages, stained both osteoclasts and giant cells; stromal cells and osteoblasts did not react. This indicates that osteoclasts and giant cells are phenotypically and presumably functionally similar. It is argued that the osteoclasts and the tumour-derived giant cells in bone are derived from a similar mononuclear precursor.
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N A Athanasou, C Hatton, J O McGee, D J Weatherall (1985)  Vascular occlusion and infarction in sickle cell crisis and the sickle chest syndrome.   J Clin Pathol 38: 6. 659-664 Jun  
Abstract: A young adult with homozygous sickle cell anaemia (Hb SS) suffered a fatal sickle cell crisis complicated by the sickle chest syndrome. At necropsy multiple large infarcts of the lung, bone marrow, and pituitary gland were found. The large majority of pulmonary infarcts were not associated with either gross or microscopic vaso-occlusion. These findings are discussed and correlated with past and current opinions of sickle cell crisis and the sickle chest syndrome.
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1984
T J Chambers, N A Athanasou, K Fuller (1984)  Effect of parathyroid hormone and calcitonin on the cytoplasmic spreading of isolated osteoclasts.   J Endocrinol 102: 3. 281-286 Sep  
Abstract: Osteoclasts, the major agents of bone resorption, were isolated from neonatal rat bone, and the cytoplasmic spreading of these cells was measured after incubation in the presence or absence of hormones or other cell types. Salmon calcitonin, which inhibits osteoclastic bone resorption, reduced spreading in a dose-dependent manner and caused significant inhibition at concentrations as low as 6.7 pg/ml. Parathyroid hormone (PTH) had no effect on the spreading of isolated osteoclasts but if osteoblasts and osteoclasts were co-cultured the addition of PTH caused a marked increase in spreading at concentrations of 0.025 i.u./ml and above. The results suggest that while calcitonin is a direct inhibitor of osteoclastic activity, PTH may stimulate osteoclasts through a primary action on osteoblasts.
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T J Chambers, K Fuller, N A Athanasou (1984)  The effect of prostaglandins I2, E1, E2 and dibutyryl cyclic AMP on the cytoplasmic spreading of rat osteoclasts.   Br J Exp Pathol 65: 5. 557-566 Oct  
Abstract: We isolated osteoclasts from neonatal rat bone and assessed the effects of prostaglandins (PGs) I2, E1 and E2 on osteoclastic spreading. We found that although the PGs and dibutyryl cyclic AMP (DB-cAMP) acted as direct inhibitors of osteoclastic spreading, if osteoblasts and osteoclasts were co-cultured, the addition of PGs or DB-cAMP caused a considerable increase in spreading. This suggests that the PGs and DB-cAMP induce osteoblasts to stimulate osteoclasts. Osteoblasts are known to produce PGs, and thus possess the capacity to either inhibit (through PGs) or stimulate osteoclasts. Our results suggest that the balance between stimulation and inhibition of osteoclasts by osteoblasts may be determined by osteoblastic cyclic AMP levels.
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T J Chambers, P A Revell, K Fuller, N A Athanasou (1984)  Resorption of bone by isolated rabbit osteoclasts.   J Cell Sci 66: 383-399 Mar  
Abstract: A carborundum wheel was used to prepare slices of cortical bone that demonstrate a predictable surface appearance in the scanning electron microscope. Osteoclasts were mechanically disaggregated from neonatal rabbit long bones and settled onto these slices. After 24h in culture osteoclasts were associated with areas of excavation in the bone surface. These excavated areas typically showed a well-defined outline and a distinctive fibrillar base, which resembled the pattern of collagen fibrils in bone. The majority of such concavities were of approximately circular outline and of smaller diameter than the associated osteoclast, but other excavations were elongated or of complex morphology, and may have been produced by osteoclasts that were resorbing bone while they migrated. Irregular concavities tended to be more shallow but to occupy a greater area of the bone surface than circular concavities. Roughening of the bone surface without detectable excavation was also seen adjacent to osteoclasts. Calcitonin and cytochalasin B, which inhibit osteoclastic motility, also inhibited bone resorptive activity by these cells. The techniques described in this paper represent a model system with which to assess the direct and indirect effects of hormones, cells and substrate composition on the induction, stimulation and inhibition of osteoclastic bone resorption and to investigate the mechanisms by which cells degrade extracellular matrices.
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