4.7 Review

Role of autophagy in intervertebral disc degeneration

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 237, Issue 2, Pages 1266-1284

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcp.30631

Keywords

autophagy; hypoxia; Intervertebral disc degeneration; nucleus pulposus; nutrient deficiency

Funding

  1. UPMC Orthopedic Surgery
  2. NIH [R01 GM102146, R01 HL141080]
  3. NIH/NIA [R01 AG044376-01]

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Intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD) is a major cause of low back pain, and the lack of understanding regarding nucleus pulposus (NP) cell metabolism and physiology hinders the development of effective treatments. Autophagy is a potential mechanism for NP cells to survive in the harsh microenvironment of the intervertebral disc, but further research is needed to determine its exact regulation and potential as a therapeutic target for IDD. Studies confirm the presence of autophagy markers in IDD tissue, but more in-depth research is necessary to establish the role of autophagy in maintaining NP cell health.
Intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD) is a leading contributor to low back pain. The intervertebral disc (IVD) is composed of three tissue types: the central gelatinous nucleus pulposus (NP) tissue, the surrounding annulus fibrosus (AF) tissue, and the inferior and superior cartilage endplates. The IVD microenvironment is hypoxic, acidic, hyperosmotic, and low in nutrients because it is mostly avascular. The cellular processes that underlie IDD initiation and progression are still poorly understood. Specifically, a lack of understanding regarding NP cell metabolism and physiology hinders the development of effective therapeutics to treat IDD patients. Autophagy is a vital intracellular degradation process that removes damaged organelles, misfolded proteins, and intracellular pathogens and recycles the degraded components for cellular energy and function. NP cells have adapted to survive within their harsh tissue microenvironment using processes that are largely unknown, and we postulate autophagy is one of these undiscovered mechanisms. In this review, we describe unique features of the IVD tissue, review how physiological stressors impact autophagy in NP cells in vitro, survey the current understanding of autophagy regulation in the IVD, and assess the relationship between autophagy and IDD. Published studies confirm autophagy markers are present in IVD tissue, and IVD cells can regulate autophagy in response to cellular stressors in vitro. However, data are still lacking to determine the exact mechanisms regulating autophagy in IVD cells. More in-depth research is needed to establish whether autophagy is necessary to maintain IVD cell health and validate autophagy as a relevant therapeutic target for treating IDD.

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