Advanced bioreactor studies of region-specific responses in the intervertebral disc to compression, flexion/extension and torsion

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Author
Šećerović, Amra
Ristaniemi, Aapo
Crivelli, Francesco
Heub, Sarah
Weder, Gilles
Ferguson, Stephen
Ledroit, Diane
Grad, Sibylle
Abstract
Intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration is inadequately understood due to the lack of in vitro systems that fully mimic the mechanical and biological complexity of this organ. We have recently made an advancement by developing a bioreactor (FigA) able to simulate physiological, multiaxial IVD loading and maintain the biological environment in ex vivo IVD models [1]. To validate this new bioreactor system, we simulated natural spine movement by loading 12 bovine IVDs under a combination of static compression (0.1 MPa), cyclic flexion/extension (±3˚, ±6˚ or 0-6˚) and cyclic torsion (±2˚, ±4˚ or 0-4˚) for more than 10'000 (0.2 Hz) or 100'000 (1 Hz) cycles over 14 days. A higher number of cycles increased the release of glycosaminoglycans (FigB) and nitric oxide, as an inflammation marker, whereas fewer cycles maintained these two factors at physiological levels. All applied protocols upregulated the expression of MMP13 in the outermost annulus fibrosus (AF), indicating a collagen degradation response (FigC). This was supported by fissures observed in the AF after a longer loading duration (FigC). Increasing loading cycles induced high cell death in the nucleus pulposus and inner AF (FigC), while with fewer cycles, high cell viability was maintained in all IVD regions, irrespective of the magnitude of rotation. Less frequent multiaxial loading maintains IVD homeostasis while more frequent loading initiates an IVD degenerative profile. Specifically, the morphological and molecular changes were localized in the AF, which can be associated with combined flexion/extension and torsion. More loading cycles induced region-specific cell death and a higher release of extracellular matrix molecules from the innermost IVD regions, likely associated with longer exposure to static compression. Altogether, we demonstrated the advantages of the multiaxial bioreactor to study region-specific response in the IVD, which will allow a more profound investigation of IVD degeneration under different combinations of motions. 1.ACS BiomaterSciEng,2022.8(9):3969-3976.
Publication Reference
EORS 2023 31st Annual Meeting of the European Orthopaedic Research Society, 27-29 SEPTEMBER 2023, PORTO, PORTUGAL
Year
2023-09-27
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