4.7 Review

Immuno-Modulatory Effects of Intervertebral Disc Cells

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.924692

Keywords

intervertebral disc degeneration; low back pain; inflammation; catabolism; immune-privileged microenvironment; GWAS; artificial intelligence-AI; agent-based model (ABM)

Funding

  1. ITN

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Low back pain is a common and serious medical condition caused by intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD). IDD leads to abnormal extracellular matrix production and metabolic changes, triggering a cascade of degenerative processes. Immune cells and inflammatory factors can accelerate this process, but catabolic ECM disruption can also occur without immune cell infiltration. Various factors, including environmental conditions and genetics, can induce this metabolic imbalance. Understanding immune modulation and the role of intervertebral disc cells in IDD is crucial for the treatment of back pain.
Low back pain is a highly prevalent, chronic, and costly medical condition predominantly triggered by intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD). IDD is often caused by structural and biochemical changes in intervertebral discs (IVD) that prompt a pathologic shift from an anabolic to catabolic state, affecting extracellular matrix (ECM) production, enzyme generation, cytokine and chemokine production, neurotrophic and angiogenic factor production. The IVD is an immune-privileged organ. However, during degeneration immune cells and inflammatory factors can infiltrate through defects in the cartilage endplate and annulus fibrosus fissures, further accelerating the catabolic environment. Remarkably, though, catabolic ECM disruption also occurs in the absence of immune cell infiltration, largely due to native disc cell production of catabolic enzymes and cytokines. An unbalanced metabolism could be induced by many different factors, including a harsh microenvironment, biomechanical cues, genetics, and infection. The complex, multifactorial nature of IDD brings the challenge of identifying key factors which initiate the degenerative cascade, eventually leading to back pain. These factors are often investigated through methods including animal models, 3D cell culture, bioreactors, and computational models. However, the crosstalk between the IVD, immune system, and shifted metabolism is frequently misconstrued, often with the assumption that the presence of cytokines and chemokines is synonymous to inflammation or an immune response, which is not true for the intact disc. Therefore, this review will tackle immunomodulatory and IVD cell roles in IDD, clarifying the differences between cellular involvements and implications for therapeutic development and assessing models used to explore inflammatory or catabolic IVD environments.

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