Abstract

We investigated the effect of medium pH on activity of isolated osteoclasts and have also looked at the possibility that medium pH affects osteoclast numbers during culture. Osteoclast-containing cell suspensions prepared from neonatal rabbits were cultured on bovine bone slices at pH 6.5, 7.0, or 7.5. After 24 or 48 h of culture, the cells and bone slices were fixed and stained for tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP). After counting the osteoclasts, the cells were removed and the resorption lacunae stained by immunostaining using anticollagen type I antibody and then quantitated. We found that the resorptive activity of isolated rabbit osteoclasts was sharply increased at pH 6.5-7. Osteoclast differentiation and proliferation, on the other hand, were optimal at pH 7.0-7.5 but decreased at pH 6.5. The results thus imply that pH regulation of the bone surface environment can dramatically alter both the number of osteoclasts and their resorptive activity.

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