Abstract

The accessibility of the mouse caudal intervertebral disc (IVD) and its geometric semblance to the human IVD makes it an attractive model for assessing IVD-specific responses in vivo. To effectively utilize this model, the temporal trajectories of key pathoanatomical features, such as the production of inflammatory chemokines, tissue disorganization, and neo- vessel and neurite infiltration, must be understood. This study aims to define the progression of chemokine production and neurovascular invasion at 2-, 4-, and 12-weeks following a caudal IVD injury in 3-month-old female C57BL6/J mice. We measured IVD-secreted chemokines and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) using multiplex ELISA, graded the histopathological degeneration, and quantified the intradiscal infiltrating vessels (endomucin) and nerves (protein-gene-product 9.5) using immunohistochemistry. Injury provoked the secretion of IL6, CCL2, CCL12, CCL17, CCL20, CCL21, CCL22, CXCL2 and MMP2 proteins. Neurites propagated rapidly within 2-weeks post-injury and remained relatively constant until 12-weeks. Peak vascular vessel length occurred at 4-weeks post-injury and regressed by 12-weeks. These findings identified the temporal flux of inflammatory chemokines and pain-associated pathoanatomy in a model of IVD degeneration using the mouse caudal spine.

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