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ABNORMAL CELL METABOLISM IN DEGENERATED INTERVERTEBRAL DISCS: A RESPONSE TO MATRIX SWELLING FOLLOWING FOCAL DAMAGE?

The Society for Back Pain Research (SBPR) Annual General Meeting: ‘Spotlight on sciatica’



Abstract

Introduction

Physical disruption of the extracellular matrix influences the mechanical and chemical environment of intervertebral disc cells. We hypothesise that this can explain degenerative changes such as focal proteoglycan loss, impaired cell-matrix binding, cell clustering, and increased activity of matrix-degrading enzymes.

Methods

Disc tissue samples were removed surgically from 11 patients (aged 34–75 yrs) who had a painful but non-herniated disc. Each sample was divided into a pair of specimens (approximately 5mm3), which were cultured at 37°C under 5% CO2. One of each pair was allowed to swell, while the other was restrained by a perspex ring. Live-cell imaging was performed with a wide field microscope for 36 hrs. Specimens were then sectioned at 5 and 30 μm for histology and immunofluorescence using a confocal microscope. Antibodies were used to recognise free integrin receptor α5β1, matrix metalloprotease MMP-1, and denatured collagen types I-III. Proteoglycan content of the medium, analysed using the colorimetric DMMB assay, was used to assess tissue swelling and GAG loss. Constrained/unconstrained results were compared using matched-pair t-tests.

Results

Time-lapse cinematography revealed small cell movements in unconstrained specimens, for up to 12 hrs. By 36 hrs, unconstrained (free swelling) samples showed greater: loss of GAG's (p<0.003), loss of integrin binding (p<0.02), synthesis of MMP-1 (p<0.03), and collagen denaturation (p<0.009). Cell clustering was evident in all tissues after 36 hrs.

Conclusion

Swelling of disrupted disc tissue disturbs cell-matrix binding, increases matrix degradation, and allows increased proteoglycan loss. This sequence of events could follow disc injury or herniation in-vivo.


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Funding: Indian government (Fellowship for PL) and BackCare

The authors have no conflicts of interest regarding this paper, and confirm that this abstract has not previously been published in whole or substantial part, nor has it been presented previously at a national meeting.