Modelling the anabolic response of bone using a cell population model
Pascal R. Buenzli, Peter Pivonka, Bruce S. Gardiner, David W. Smith

TL;DR
This paper enhances a mathematical model of bone cell interactions by including precursor osteoblast proliferation, enabling better understanding of anabolic responses and disease processes like prostate cancer metastasis to bone.
Contribution
The model is extended to incorporate osteoblast precursor proliferation, Wnt signalling, and osteoblast recruitment, improving representation of bone biology and disease mechanisms.
Findings
Increased precursor differentiation or proliferation boosts bone mass.
Model captures Wnt signalling's role in bone response.
Simulates bone mass changes due to prostate cancer metastasis.
Abstract
To maintain bone mass during bone remodelling, coupling is required between bone resorption and bone formation. This coordination is achieved by a network of autocrine and paracrine signalling molecules between cells of the osteoclast lineage and cells of the osteoblastic lineage. Mathematical modelling of signalling between cells of both lineages can assist in the interpretation of experimental data, clarify signalling interactions and help develop a deeper understanding of complex bone diseases. In this paper, we further develop a mathematical model of bone cell interactions by Pivonka et al. (2008) to include the proliferation of precursor osteoblasts into the model. This inclusion is important to be able to account for Wnt signalling, believed to play an important role in anabolic responses of bone. We show that an increased rate of differentiation to precursor cells or an increased…
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