Abstract

Intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD) causes chronic back pain and is linked to production of proinflammatory molecules by nucleus pulposus (NP) and other disc cells. Activation of tonicity-responsive enhancer-binding protein (TonEBP)/NFAT5 by non-osmotic stimuli, including proinflammatory molecules, occurs in cells involved in immune response. However, whether inflammatory stimuli activate TonEBP in NP cells and whether TonEBP controls inflammation during IDD is unknown. We show that TNF-α, but not IL-1β or LPS, promoted nuclear enrichment of TonEBP protein. However, TNF-α-mediated activation of TonEBP did not cause induction of osmoregulatory genes. RNA sequencing showed that 8.5% of TNF-α transcriptional responses were TonEBP-dependent and identified genes regulated by both TNF-α and TonEBP. These genes were over-enriched in pathways and diseases related to inflammatory response and inhibition of matrix metalloproteases. Based on RNA-sequencing results, we further investigated regulation of novel TonEBP targets CXCL1, CXCL2, and CXCL3 TonEBP acted synergistically with TNF-α and LPS to induce CXCL1-proximal promoter activity. Interestingly, this regulation required a highly conserved NF-κB-binding site but not a predicted TonE, suggesting cross-talk between these two members of the Rel family. Finally, analysis of human NP tissue showed that TonEBP expression correlated with canonical osmoregulatory targets TauT/SLC6A6, SMIT/SLC5A3, and AR/AKR1B1, supporting in vitro findings that the inflammatory milieu during IDD does not interfere with TonEBP osmoregulation. In summary, whereas TonEBP participates in the proinflammatory response to TNF-α, therapeutic strategies targeting this transcription factor for treatment of disc disease must spare osmoprotective, prosurvival, and matrix homeostatic activities.

Highlights

  • Intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD) causes chronic back pain and is linked to production of proinflammatory molecules by nucleus pulposus (NP) and other disc cells

  • We investigated whether TNF-␣, IL-1␤, and LPS promote tonicity-responsive enhancer-binding protein (TonEBP) expression in NP cells

  • Only treatment with TNF-␣ significantly increased the nuclear pool of TonEBP protein (Fig. 1, D and E), whereas neither IL-1␤ (Fig. 1, F and G) nor LPS (Fig. 1, H and I) treatment had any effect on nuclear enrichment of TonEBP

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Summary

Introduction

Intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD) causes chronic back pain and is linked to production of proinflammatory molecules by nucleus pulposus (NP) and other disc cells. RNA sequencing showed that 8.5% of TNF-␣ transcriptional responses were TonEBP-dependent and identified genes regulated by both TNF-␣ and TonEBP. These genes were over-enriched in pathways and diseases related to inflammatory response and inhibition of matrix metalloproteases. TonEBP acted synergistically with TNF-␣ and LPS to induce CXCL1-proximal promoter activity This regulation required a highly conserved NF-␬B-binding site but not a predicted TonE, suggesting cross-talk between these two members of the Rel family. NP and other disc cells produce cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor-␣ (TNF-␣)/TNF and IL-1␤, which contribute to an inflammatory environment through NF-␬B- and MAPK-signaling pathways and promote production of matrix-degrading MMP and ADAMTS family members [12,13,14,15,16]. In fibroblast-like synoviocytes derived from rheumatoid arthritis patients, TNF-␣ and IL-1␤

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