Abstract
We developed a facile method for studying bone resorption using fetal rat femur by labelling the bone with 45Ca in vitro. We found that cartilages stimulated the bone resorption of a shaft which was obtained by cutting off both distal and proximal cartilages from the femur. When the shaft was co-cultured with the cartilages isolated by a 0.4-μm microporous membrane in the same Transwell™, the bone resorption of the shaft was increased. This finding suggests that the stimulation of bone resorption by the cartilages is not a result of recruitment of osteoclasts or the precursor cells from the cartilages . Indomethacin (10-6 M) failed to influence the bone resorbing activity of the cartilages. The bone resorbing activity in the supernatant obtained from the cartilage-culture was decreased by heating. The bone resorbing activity of the supernatant did not remain in the lipid-extract or the pronase-digested supernatant, but was present in a fraction whose molecular weight was greater than 50, 000. These results collectively suggest that the cartilages produce a bone resorption-stimulating factor(s) which is water-soluble, is a non-prostanoid material, contains protein and has a molecular weight greater than 50, 000.