Abstract

Inhibition of intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration, which is often accompanied by painful inflammatory and immunopathological processes, is challenging. Current IVD gene therapeutic approaches are based on adenoviral gene delivery systems, which are limited by immune reactions to their viral proteins. Their applications in IVDs near to sensitive neural structure could provoke toxicity and immunological side-effects with neurological deficits. Self-complementary adeno-associated virus (scAAV) vectors, which do not express any viral gene and are not linked with any known disease in humans, are attractive therapeutic gene delivery vectors in degenerative IVDs. However, scAAV-based silencing of catabolic or inflammatory factor has not yet been investigated in human IVD cells. Therefore, we used scAAV6, the most suitable serotype for transduction of human nucleus pulposus (NP) cells, to knockdown the major catabolic gene (ADAMTS4) of IVD degeneration. IVD degeneration grades were determined by preoperative magnetic resonance imaging. Lumbar NP tissues of degeneration grade III were removed from 12 patients by nucleotomy. NP cells were isolated and cultured with low-glucose. Titre of recombinant scAAV6 vectors targeting ADAMTS4, transduction efficiencies, transduction units, cell viabilities and expression levels of target genes were analysed using quantitative PCR, fluorescence microscopy, fluorescence-activated cell sorting, 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazolyl-2)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide assays, quantitative reverse transcription PCR, western blot and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays during 48 days of post-transduction. Transduction efficiencies between 98.2% and 37.4% and transduction units between 611 and 245 TU/cell were verified during 48 days of post-transduction (p<0.001). scAAV6-mediated knockdown of ADAMTS4 with maximum 87.7% and minimum 40.1% was confirmed on day 8 and 48 with enhanced the level of aggrecan 48.5% and 30.2% respectively (p<0.001). scAAV6-mediated knockdown of ADAMTS4 showed no impact on cell viability and expression levels of other inflammatory catabolic proteins. Thus, our results are promising and may help to design long-term and less immunogenic gene therapeutic approaches in IVD disorders, which usually need prolonged therapeutic period between weeks and months.

Highlights

  • Intervertebral discs (IVDs) have a particular load-bearing organization that distributes loading consistently on the vertebral bodies, withstands spinal compression and provides flexibility in the spine

  • Inclusion criteria for surgery were intervertebral disc herniation with nerve root compression detected on MRI, which correlated to primary symptoms that remained unresponsive to nonoperative treatment for six weeks, or demonstrated progressive neurological deterioration in the face of conservative treatment. 12 lumbar discs of Pfirman degeneration grade III from 12 patients were involved in this study (Table 1)

  • associated viruses (AAVs) vectors that do not express any viral protein and are not linked with any known disease in humans are important for gene therapeutic approaches in degenerative IVD diseases

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Intervertebral discs (IVDs) have a particular load-bearing organization that distributes loading consistently on the vertebral bodies, withstands spinal compression and provides flexibility in the spine. IVDs consist of hydrated nucleus pulposus (NP), radially aligned annulus fibrosus (AF) and cartilaginous endplates (EP) [1,2]. NP contains predominantly proteoglycans, hyaluronic acid and type II collagen. The major proteoglycan constituent is aggrecan, which is connected by link protein to the hyaluronic acid. A fibril network of AF made from various types of collagen and glycoproteins enfolds the NP [1,2]. Painful IVD degeneration is associated with structural failure of IVD tissues, which is often accompanied by inflammatory and immunopathological processes [3,4,5]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call