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Jay H. Henderson,
PhD |
Stanford Office:
- 224 Durand
- 650/736-0807
PhD Project
- The Role of Growth-Generated Strains and Pressures in Cranial
Development
Development is regulated by intrinsic factors within cells and by
inductive signals. This thesis introduces the concept that connected tissues
growing at different rates necessarily generate complicated distributions of
physical deformations (strains) and pressures. The hypothesis that these
growth-generated strains and pressures act as inductive signals throughout
development is presented, and the role of growth-generated strains and
pressures in cranial development and in skeletal condensation growth is
investigated.
In the first study, general theoretical techniques for estimating
sutural bone deposition rate and strain magnitude during mammalian cranial
development are developed. These techniques are then applied to human
development. The results indicate that human sutural strain is small
(approximately 0.0021 to 0.041% at 1 month of age) and decreases with
increasing age. In the second study, morphological measurements and tensile
tests are performed on sagittal sutures from rats, and the strain present in
the suture in vivo are estimated. The results show that sutural strains
in rats (average of 0.027 ± 0.019% for postnatal days two to sixty) are
similar in magnitude to the estimate of sutural strains in young humans.
In the third study, surgical experiments and finite element modeling are
used to calculate the residual tensile strains present in vivo in the
dura mater of rats. The results show that large residual tensile strains are
present in vivo and are age dependent (average of 4.76 ± 1.51 for
immature rats vs. 0.36 ± 0.12% for mature rats).
In the final study, growth-generated strains and pressures are
correlated with in vivo gene expression during growth of a skeletal
condensation. The results show that areas of tensile strain correlate with
expression of osteogenic or fibrogenic genes, and areas of pressure correlate
with genes associated with chondrocyte differentiation and maturation. The
findings presented in this thesis illustrate the existence and potential
importance of growth-generated strains and pressures in cranial development and
in skeletal condensation growth. In addition, the concepts and findings
presented in this thesis suggest that a richer appreciation of the events that
control early skeletal patterning and development can be gained by
understanding the relationships between growth-generated strain/pressure and
local tissue, cell, and molecular biology.
Last updated 10/04/2005
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