Title of article
Effect of therapeutic levels of doxycycline and minocycline in the proliferation and differentiation of human bone marrow osteoblastic cells
Author/Authors
Gomes، نويسنده , , Pedro Sousa and Fernandes، نويسنده , , Maria Helena، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
9
From page
251
To page
259
Abstract
Semi-synthetic tetracyclines (TCs) have been reported to reduce pathological bone resorption through several mechanisms, although their effect over bone physiological metabolism is not yet fully understood. The present study aims at evaluate the behaviour of osteoblastic-induced human bone marrow cells regarding proliferation and functional activity, in the presence of representative therapeutic concentrations of doxycycline and minocycline. First passage human osteoblastic bone marrow cells were cultured for 35 days in conditions known to favor osteoblastic differentiation. Doxycycline (1–25 μg/ml) or minocycline (1–50 μg/ml) were added continuously, with the culture medium, twice a week with every medium change. Cultures were characterised at several time points for cell proliferation and function.
t data showed that 1 μg/ml of both tetracyclines, level representative of that attained in plasma and crevicular fluid with the standard therapeutic dosage, increased significantly the proliferation of human bone marrow osteoblastic cells without altering their specific phenotype and functional activity. Long-term exposure to these TCs induced a significant increase in the number of active osteoblastic cells that yielded a proportional amount of a normal mineralised matrix, suggesting a potential application in therapeutic approaches aiming to increase bone formation. The presence of higher levels of these agents led to a dose-dependent deleterious effect over cell culture, delaying cell proliferation and differentiation.
Keywords
Doxycycline , Minocycline , Human bone marrow osteoblastic cells , Osteoblast proliferation , Osteoblast differentiation
Journal title
Archives of Oral Biology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Archives of Oral Biology
Record number
1803983
Link To Document