Abstract
Introduction
Intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD) is a progressive process affecting all disc tissues, namely the nucleus pulposus (NP), annulus fibrosus (AF), and cartilaginous endplates (CEPs). Several cell-based therapies have been proposed to replenish the disc cell population and promote tissue regeneration. However, cell-free therapeutics have been increasingly explored due to potentially higher advantages and cost-effectiveness compared to cell transplantation. Recently, extracellular vesicles (EVs) isolated from healthy Tie2+-NP cells (NPCs) have shown promising regenerative outcomes on degenerative NPCs (dNPCs). The aim of this study was to assess the effect of such EVs on all disc cell types, including AF cells (AFCs) and CEP cells (CEPCs), compared to EVs isolated from bone-marrow derived mesenchymal stromal cells (BM-MSCs).
Method
NPCs harvested from young donors underwent an optimized culture protocol to maximize Tie2 expression (NPCsTie2+). BM-MSCs were retrieved from a commercial cell line or harvested during spine surgery procedures. EV characterization was performed via particle size analysis (qNano), expression of EV markers (Western blot), and transmission electron microscopy. dNPCs, AFCs, and CEPCs were isolated from surgical specimens of patients affected by IDD, culture-expanded, and treated with NPCsTie2+-EVs or BM-MSC-EVs ± 10 ng/mL IL-1b. EV uptake was assessed with PKH26 staining of EVs under confocal microscopy. Cell proliferation and viability were assessed with the CCK-8 assay.
Result
Upon characterization, isolated EVs exhibited the typical exosomal characteristics. NPCsTie2+-EVs and BM-MSC-EVs uptake was successfully observed in all dNPCs, AFCs, and CEPCs. Both EV products significantly increased dNPC, AFC, and CEPC viability, especially in samples treated with NPCsTie2+-EVs.
Conclusion
NPCsTie2+-EVs demonstrated to significantly stimulate the proliferation and viability of degenerative cells isolated from all disc tissues. Rather than the sole NP, EVs isolated by committed progenitors physiologically residing within the disc may exert their regenerative effects on the whole organ, thus possibly constituting the basis for a new therapy for IDD.