Abstract

BackgroundMesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have been introduced as promising cell source for regenerative medicine. Besides their multilineage differentiation capacity, MSCs release a wide spectrum of bioactive factors. This secretome holds immunomodulatory and regenerative capacities. In intervertebral disc (IVD) cells, application of MSC secretome has been shown to decrease the apoptosis rate, induce proliferation, and promote production of extracellular matrix (ECM). For clinical translation of secretome-based treatment, characterization of the secretome composition is needed to better understand the induced biological processes and identify potentially effective secretomes.MethodsThis study aimed to investigate the proteome released by bone marrow-derived MSCs following exposure to a healthy, traumatic, or degenerative human IVD environment by mass spectroscopy and quantitative immunoassay analyses. Exposure of MSCs to the proinflammatory stimulus interleukin 1β (IL-1β) was used as control.ResultsCompared to MSC baseline secretome, there were 224 significantly up- or downregulated proteins following healthy, 179 following traumatic, 223 following degenerative IVD, and 160 proteins following IL-1β stimulus. Stimulation of MSCs with IVD conditioned media induced a more complex MSC secretome, involving more biological processes, compared to stimulation with IL-1β. The MSC response to stimulation with IVD conditioned medium was dependent on their pathological status.ConclusionsThe MSC secretome seemed to match the primary need of the IVD: homeostasis maintenance in the case of healthy IVDs, versus immunomodulation, adjustment of ECM synthesis and degradation disbalance, and ECM (re) organization in the case of traumatic and degenerative IVDs. These findings highlight the importance of cell preconditioning in the development of tailored secretome therapies.Graphical abstractThe secretome of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) stimulated with intervertebral disc (IVD) conditioned medium was analyzed by proteomic profiling. Depending on the pathological state of the IVD, the MSC secretome protein composition indicated immunomodulatory or anabolic activity of the secretome. These findings may have implications for tailored secretome therapy for the IVD and other tissues.

Highlights

  • Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have been introduced as promising cell source for regenerative medicine

  • Viability of MSCs following priming with intervertebral disc conditioned medium To investigate whether MSC viability was affected by the IVD CM or a proinflammatory environment, a cytotoxicity assay was performed (LDH), the DNA content and the metabolic activity were analyzed, and the cell morphology assessed

  • Stimulation of MSCs with healthy and degenerative IVD CM induced a significant increase in DNA content (1.78 ± 0.57 and 1.30 ± 0.27-fold, respectively) compared to the baseline condition (0.87 ± 0.24-fold) (P < 0.01), indicating enhanced cell proliferation

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Summary

Introduction

Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have been introduced as promising cell source for regenerative medicine. Besides their multilineage differentiation capacity, MSCs release a wide spectrum of bioactive factors. This secretome holds immunomodulatory and regenerative capacities. In intervertebral disc (IVD) cells, application of MSC secretome has been shown to decrease the apoptosis rate, induce proliferation, and promote production of extracellular matrix (ECM). MSCs can influence IVD cells by secreting bioactive factors which cause a shift from a degenerative towards a healthier disc cell phenotype [5,6,7]. It is hypothesized that the main regenerative effect of MSCs would be mediated by paracrine stimulation rather than by engrafting, differentiation, and de novo ECM production [12]

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