osteocalcin
English
Etymology
osteo- + calc- + -in
Noun
osteocalcin (countable and uncountable, plural osteocalcins)
- (organic chemistry, biochemistry) A protein, found in bone and dentin and manufactured by osteoblasts, that plays a role in mineralization and calcium ion homeostasis.
- 1994, Hideaki Ogura, Pharmacological Approach to the Study of the Formation and the Resorption Mechanism of Hard Tissues, Ishiyaku EuroAmerica, page 134,
- Comparison of the sequences of the various osteocalcins indicates that the central portion of the molecule is highly conserved.
- 2014, Lee B. Smith, William H. Walker, 16: Hormone Signaling in the Testis, Tony M. Plant, Anthony J. Zeleznik (editors), Knobil and Neill's Physiology of Reproduction, Elsevier (Academic Press), page 669,
- Osteocalcin has recently been identified as a bone-derived hormone with significant functional impacts on sex steroid production by the testis, completing the circle of mutual interdependence between the skeletal system and gonad (for reviews, see Refs 536–538).
- 2017, Olena V. Andrukhova, Reinhold G. Erben, 11: Kidney—Bone: Interaction, Susan Y. Smith, Aurore Varela, Rana Samadfam (editors), Bone Toxicology, Springer, page 349,
- Osteocalcin together with the other Gla-protein MGP belongs to a distinct subgroup of the larger vitamin K-dependent protein family, the constituents of which are primarily involved in blood coagulation.
- 1994, Hideaki Ogura, Pharmacological Approach to the Study of the Formation and the Resorption Mechanism of Hard Tissues, Ishiyaku EuroAmerica, page 134,
Translations
protein found in bone and dentin, manufactured by osteoblasts
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