Abstract

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 cell metabolism 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. Weighted Gene Co-expression Network Analysis discerned enrichment in genes in pathways of inflammation and skeletogenesis. 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 normal healthy annuli fibrosi and lays the foundation for future work defining how healthy and diseased intervertebral discs respond to single or low-frequency manual loads typical of those applied clinically.

Highlights

  • Persistent low back pain is a global problem responsible for more years-lived-with-disability than any other condition [1, 2]

  • Using a cutoff of p

  • While pathology of the spine, including the intervertebral disc, is commonly documented in patients with a history of back pain, the exact source of back pain remains indeterminate, and it is unclear if manual therapies have any influence on intervertebral discs (IVD) metabolism that might promote repair, preserve health, or diminish pain

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Summary

Introduction

Persistent low back pain is a global problem responsible for more years-lived-with-disability than any other condition [1, 2]. The health, societal, and economic burdens associated. The original data for PCR experiments, DAVID, PANTHER, and WGCNA analyses are available at the Open Science Framework (OSF) data repository (DOI: 10.17605/ OSF.IO/75NUG)

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