Immuno-stimulatory capacity of decorin in the rat tail intervertebral disc and the mechanical consequence of resultant inflammation

2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (7) ◽  
pp. 1641-1648
Author(s):  
Derek P. Zwambag ◽  
Sara Molladavoodi ◽  
Matthew J. Guerreiro ◽  
Stephanie J. DeWitte-Orr ◽  
Diane E. Gregory
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (11) ◽  
pp. 5648
Author(s):  
Takashi Yurube ◽  
Hiroaki Hirata ◽  
Masaaki Ito ◽  
Yoshiki Terashima ◽  
Yuji Kakiuchi ◽  
...  

The intervertebral disc is the largest avascular low-nutrient organ in the body. Thus, resident cells may utilize autophagy, a stress-response survival mechanism, by self-digesting and recycling damaged components. Our objective was to elucidate the involvement of autophagy in rat experimental disc degeneration. In vitro, the comparison between human and rat disc nucleus pulposus (NP) and annulus fibrosus (AF) cells found increased autophagic flux under serum deprivation rather in humans than in rats and in NP cells than in AF cells of rats (n = 6). In vivo, time-course Western blotting showed more distinct basal autophagy in rat tail disc NP tissues than in AF tissues; however, both decreased under sustained static compression (n = 24). Then, immunohistochemistry displayed abundant autophagy-related protein expression in large vacuolated disc NP notochordal cells of sham rats. Under temporary static compression (n = 18), multi-color immunofluorescence further identified rapidly decreased brachyury-positive notochordal cells with robust expression of autophagic microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3 (LC3) and transiently increased brachyury-negative non-notochordal cells with weaker LC3 expression. Notably, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling-positive apoptotic death was predominant in brachyury-negative non-notochordal cells. Based on the observed notochordal cell autophagy impairment and non-notochordal cell apoptosis induction under unphysiological mechanical loading, further investigation is warranted to clarify possible autophagy-induced protection against notochordal cell disappearance, the earliest sign of disc degeneration, through limiting apoptosis.


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. s-0035-1554149-s-0035-1554149
Author(s):  
Ajay Matta ◽  
William Mark Erwin ◽  
Muhammad Zia Karim ◽  
Jasleen Singh ◽  
Xiomei Wang ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 29 (7) ◽  
pp. 814-819 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alon Lai ◽  
Daniel H.K. Chow ◽  
W.S. Siu ◽  
Andrew D. Holmes ◽  
F.H. Tang

Author(s):  
David Hwang ◽  
Miao Yu ◽  
Adam H. Hsieh

It has been thoroughly documented that low back pain is often associated with deregulated biological function and compromised mechanical behavior of the intervertebral disc. Therefore, intervertebral disc mechanics have long been thought of as important factors both in driving cell-mediated processes involved in degeneration and in distinguishing between healthy versus degenerate discs. The nucleus pulposus is an integral part of the mechanics of the disc, the key property being its ability to pressurize to resist and distribute compressive stress to the annulus fibrosus and the endplates. There has been a history of intradiscal pressure measurements in cadaveric as well as large animal studies; however, these studies have focused on the consequences of degeneration or the change in stress distribution by varying spinal orientations. In order to be able to relate local stresses induced in discs to changes in cellular function, such pressure measurements must be obtained from an animal model amenable to chronic disc loading. Rat tail discs have been one widely used laboratory model, but the discs are too small for measuring load-induced nucleus pressures using current sensor technology.


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