Project description:In mammals, temporally coordinated daily rhythms of behaviour and physiology are generated by a multi-oscillatory circadian system, entrained through cyclic environmental cues (e.g. light). Presence of niche-dependent physiological time cues have been proposed to allow local tissues flexibility of adopting a different phase relationship if circumstances require. Up till now, such tissue-unique stimuli have remained elusive. Here we show that cycles of mechanical loading and osmotic stimuli within physiological range drive rhythmic expression of clock genes and reset clock phase and amplitude in cartilage and intervertebral disc tissues.
Project description:Back pain and intervertebral disc degeneration are prevalent, costly, and widely treated by manual therapies, yet the underlying causes of these diseases are indeterminate as are the scientific bases for such treatments. The present studies characterize the effects of repetitive in vivo manual loads on porcine intervertebral disc using RNA deep sequencing. A single session of repetitive manual loading applied to the lumbar spine induced both up- and down-regulation of a variety of genes transcribed by cells in the ventral annuli fibrosi. The effect of manual therapy at the level of loading was greater than at a level distant to the applied load. Gene ontology and molecular pathway analyses categorized biological, molecular, and cellular functions influenced by repetitive manual loading, with over-representation of membrane, transmembrane, and pericellular activities. The present studies support previous findings of intervertebral disc cell mechanotransduction, and are the first to report comprehensively on the repertoire of gene targets influenced by mechanical loads associated with manual therapy interventions. The present study defines the cellular response of repeated, low-amplitude loads on the annuli fibrosi and lays the foundation for future work defining how the intervertebral disc responds to single or low-frequency manual loads typical of those applied clinically.
Project description:Daily rhythms in mammalian behaviour and physiology are generated by a multi-oscillator circadian system entrained through environmental cues (e.g. light and feeding). The presence of tissue niche-dependent physiological time cues has been proposed, allowing tissues the ability of circadian phase adjustment based on local signals. However, to date, such stimuli have remained elusive. Here we show that daily patterns of mechanical loading and associated osmotic challenge within physiological ranges reset circadian clock phase and amplitude in cartilage and intervertebral disc tissues in vivo and in tissue explant cultures. Hyperosmolarity (but not hypo-osmolarity) resets clocks in young and ageing skeletal tissues and induce genome-wide expression of rhythmic genes in cells. Mechanistically, RNAseq and biochemical analysis revealed the PLD2-mTORC2-AKT-GSK3β axis as a convergent pathway for both in vivo loading and hyperosmolarity-induced clock changes. These results reveal diurnal patterns of mechanical loading and consequent daily surges in osmolarity as a bona fide tissue niche-specific time cue to maintain skeletal circadian rhythms in sync.
Project description:The physiological function of the intervertebral disc (IVD) depends on the cellular and molecular composition of the nucleus pulposus (NP), which plays a key role in managing the mechanical loading of the IVD.We conducted single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) analysis to better characterize the NP cells, particularly the Shh-tdTom+ NP cells, in the adult Shh-CreER; Rosa26tdTomato mice.
Project description:Failure of intervertebral disc components, e.g. the nucleus pulposus causes intervertebral disc disease and associated low-back pain. Despite the high prevalence of disc disease, the changes in intervertebral disc cells and their regenerative potential with ageing and degeneration are not fully elucidated. Understanding the cell lineage, cell differentiation and maintenance of nucleus pulposus may have therapeutic application for the regeneration of degenerative disc, with significant impact for healthy ageing. Here we found that TAGLN expressing cells are present in human healthy nucleus pulposus, but diminish in degenerative disc. By lineage analyses in mice, we found cells in the nucleus pulposus are derived from a peripherally located population of notochord-derived Tagln expressing cells (PeriNP cells). The PeriNP cells are proliferative and can differentiate into the inner part of the nucleus pulposus. The Tagln+ cells and descendants diminish during aging and puncture induced disc degeneration. The maintenance and differentiation of PeriNP cells is partially regulated by Smad4 dependent signaling. Removal of Smad4 by nucleus pulposus specific Cre (Foxa2mNE-Cre), results in decreased Tagln+ cells and abnormal disc morphology, leading to disc degeneration. Our findings propose that the PeriNP Tagln expressing cells are a pool of notochord-derived progenitors that are important for maintenance of the nucleus pulposus and provide insights for regenerative therapy against intervertebral disc degeneration.
Project description:Gene expression profiling of immortalized human mesenchymal stem cells with hTERT/E6/E7 transfected MSCs. hTERT may change gene expression in MSCs. Goal was to determine the gene expressions of immortalized MSCs.
Project description:Human intervertebral disc tissue was obtained from patients (average age 51 yrs) undergoing surgery for lumbar interbody fusion (n=3) or lumbar disc herniation (n=1). Cells were isolated by sequential pronase-collagenase digestion [3]. Cells were passaged twice in monolayer and suspended at a density of 2 x 106 cells/ml in 1.2% alginate (low viscosity, Sigma Chemical, St Louis, MO) dissolved in 150 mM NaCl. Alginate beads were formed by dropwise addition of the alginate from a 22 gauge needle into 102 mM CaCl2, followed by 10 minutes of curing, as described previously [13, 27]. Cell-gel beads were incubated in cell culture media consisting of Ham’s F-12 medium (Gibco BRL, Grand Island, NY), supplemented with 10% FBS (HyClone, Logan, UT), 25 μg/ml ascorbic acid (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 μg/ml streptomycin, and 1 μg/ml Fungizone at 5% CO2 and 37° C. After 24 h, the cell culture medium was removed via pipette and exchanged for one of three osmotically active solutions, representing iso-osmotic, hyper-osmotic and hypo-osmotic media [12, 23, 34]. The iso-osmotic solution consisted of a defined cell culture medium (Ham’s F-12 with supplements as described above; 293 mOsm/kg H2O). The hypo-osmotic solution consisted of the same cell culture media diluted with de-ionized water to a final osmolarity of 250 mOsm/kg H2O. The hyper-osmotic solution consisted of the same cell culture media supplemented with sucrose to a final osmolarity of 450 mOsm/kg H20. The osmolarity of all solution formulations was determined using a freezing-point osmometer (Advanced Laboratory Wide Range 3W2, Advanced Instrument, Needham Heights, MA) as described previously [12]. Cell-alginate beads were cultured for a 4 hour period under one of these conditions, after which the cells were released from alginate in a dissolving buffer (55 mM Na-citrate and 150 mM NaCl), lysed and stored at –80°C. Intervertebral disc (IVD) cells experience a broad range of physical stimuli under physiologic conditions, including alterations in their osmotic environment. In this study, the gene expression profile of human IVD cells was quantified with gene array technology following exposure to varying osmolarity in order to capture the biological responses for a broad set of targets. A total of 42 genes were identified in IVD cells as significantly changed following culture under hyper-osmotic conditions, while a total of 18 genes were identified as significantly changed under hypo-osmotic conditions. Gene expression patterns were verified using RT-PCR. Genes identified in this study include those related to cytoskeleton remodeling and stabilization (ephrin-B2, sarcoglycan beta, IQGAP1), as well as membrane transport (ion transporter SLC21A12, osmolyte tranporter SLC5A3, monocarboxylic acid SLC16A6, and amino acid transporter SLC7A8). An unexpected finding was the differential regulation of the gene for the neurotrophin brain-derived neurotrophic factor by hyper-osmotic stimuli that may be indicative of a physiological response of IVD cells to physical stimuli important in regulating discogenic pain. Keywords = intervertebral disc Keywords = osmotic stimuli Keywords: other
Project description:Transcriptional profiling of human mesenchymal stem cells comparing normoxic MSCs cells with hypoxic MSCs cells. Hypoxia may inhibit senescence of MSCs during expansion. Goal was to determine the effects of hypoxia on global MSCs gene expression.