(A) Osteogenic differentiation is a well-coordinated process. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can give rise to several lineages, such as myocytes, adipocytes, chondrocytes, and osteocytes, with appropriate stimuli, presumably by activating proper lineage-specific regulators, eg, MyoD, PPARγ, Sox9, or Runx2/Osterix. Osteogenic differentiation is a tightly controlled process, which can be monitored by using alkaline phosphatase as an early marker and osteocalcin and osteopontin as late markers. (B) Disruption of osteogenic differentiation may lead to OS development. The defects caused by genetic (eg, activation of oncogenes or inactivation of p53 and RB tumor suppressor genes) and epigenetic alterations may occur at different stages of osteogenic differentiation. It is conceivable defects at the early stages may lead to the development of more aggressive and undifferentiated OS, or vice versa. The cells filled with black color indicate cancer-initiating cells.