open access publication

Article, 2024

How osteons form: A quantitative hypothesis-testing analysis of cortical pore filling and wall asymmetry

Bone, ISSN 8756-3282, 1873-2763, Volume 180, Page 116998, 10.1016/j.bone.2023.116998

Contributors

Hegarty-Cremer, Solene G D 0000-0002-4600-407X [1] [2] Borggaard, Xenia Goldberg 0000-0002-4922-2478 [3] [4] Andreasen, Christina Møller 0000-0002-2624-5677 [3] [4] Van Der Eerden, Bram C J 0000-0003-4403-6497 [5] Simpson, Matthew Joseph 0000-0001-6254-313X [2] Andersen, Thomas Levin 0000-0002-6981-7276 [3] [4] [6] Buenzli, Pascal R 0000-0003-3962-5393 (Corresponding author) [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Montreal
  2. [NORA names: Canada; America, North; OECD];
  3. [2] Queensland University of Technology
  4. [NORA names: Australia; Oceania; OECD];
  5. [3] Odense University Hospital
  6. [NORA names: Region of Southern Denmark; Hospital; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  7. [4] University of Southern Denmark
  8. [NORA names: SDU University of Southern Denmark; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  9. [5] Erasmus MC
  10. [NORA names: Netherlands; Europe, EU; OECD];

Abstract

Osteon morphology provides valuable information about the interplay between different processes involved in bone remodelling. The correct quantitative interpretation of these morphological features is challenging due to the complexity of interactions between osteoblast behaviour, and the evolving geometry of cortical pores during pore closing. We present a combined experimental and mathematical modelling study to provide insights into bone formation mechanisms during cortical bone remodelling based on histological cross-sections of quiescent human osteons and hypothesis-testing analyses. We introduce wall thickness asymmetry as a measure of the local asymmetry of bone formation within an osteon and examine the frequency distribution of wall thickness asymmetry in cortical osteons from human iliac crest bone samples from women 16-78 years old. Our measurements show that most osteons possess some degree of asymmetry, and that the average degree of osteon asymmetry in cortical bone evolves with age. We then propose a comprehensive mathematical model of cortical pore filling that includes osteoblast secretory activity, osteoblast elimination, osteoblast embedment as osteocytes, and osteoblast crowding and redistribution along the bone surface. The mathematical model is first calibrated to symmetric osteon data, and then used to test three mechanisms of asymmetric wall formation against osteon data: (i) delays in the onset of infilling around the cement line; (ii) heterogeneous osteoblastogenesis around the bone perimeter; and (iii) heterogeneous osteoblast secretory rate around the bone perimeter. Our results suggest that wall thickness asymmetry due to off-centred Haversian pores within osteons, and that nonuniform lamellar thicknesses within osteons are important morphological features that can indicate the prevalence of specific asymmetry-generating mechanisms. This has significant implications for the study of disruptions of bone formation as it could indicate what biological bone formation processes may become disrupted with age or disease.

Keywords

activity, age, analysis, asymmetry, average degree, behavior, bone, bone formation, bone formation mechanisms, bone formation process, bone perimeter, bone remodeling, bone samples, bone surface, cement, cement lines, closing, complex, complexity of interactions, comprehensive mathematical model, cortical bone, cortical bone remodeling, cortical osteons, cortical pores, crowding, data, degree, degree of asymmetry, delay, disease, elimination, embedding, evolving geometry, features, filling, formation, formation mechanism, formation process, frequency, frequency distribution, histological cross-sections, human osteons, hypothesis-testing analysis, iliac crest bone samples, infill, information, interaction, interpretation, lamellar thickness, lines, local asymmetry, mathematical model, mathematical modeling studies, measurements, mechanism, model, modeling studies, morphological features, morphology, onset, osteoblast behavior, osteoblast secretory activity, osteoblastogenesis, osteoblasts, osteocytes, osteon morphology, osteons, perimeter, pore, pore closing, pore filling, prevalence, process, quantitative interpretation, rate, redistribution, remodeling, samples, secretory activity, secretory rate, study, surface, thickness, thickness asymmetry, wall, wall asymmetry, wall formation, women

Funders

  • Australian Research Council

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